Issues of Control and Responsibility in Workers' Health
- 1 December 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Health Education Quarterly
- Vol. 15 (4), 473-486
- https://doi.org/10.1177/109019818801500407
Abstract
The issues of responsibility for health and control of factors influencing health are discussed with regard to workplace health programs. The role of each of the parties involved—workers, unions, management, and the government-can best be understood in relation to the interests they hold in workers' health. A matrix is presented which divides influences on workers' health according to the degree to which they are con trolled by employers and workers. This matrix is used to suggest that workplace health promotion and employee assistance programs may represent employer involvement in areas over which they lack legitimate control. These programs are also criticized for their emphasis on behavior and their neglect of work-related causes of ill health and unhealthy behavior. They should be considered supplemental to a work environment which is conducive to both physical and psychosocial health; they will be most effec tive and appropriate with a high degree of worker involvement and control. Evidence regarding the effects of occupation and class on health and health-related behavior is presented to support the need for a comprehensive, ecological approach to workers' health. Such an approach should take into account the full range of influences and recognize the limits of legitimate control.Keywords
This publication has 53 references indexed in Scilit:
- Workplace Health Promotion: A Commentary on the Evolution of a ParadigmHealth Education Quarterly, 1987
- The Business of Health Promotion: Ethical Issues and Professional ResponsibilitiesHealth Education Quarterly, 1987
- Ethics in Worksite Health Programming: Who is Served?Health Education Quarterly, 1987
- Selling Health Promotion to Corporate America: Uses and Abuses of the Economic ArgumentHealth Education Quarterly, 1987
- The Vermont health risk survey and the design of community wide preventive health programsJournal of Community Health, 1985
- Assessing recent developments and opportunities in the promotion of health in the American workplaceSocial Science & Medicine, 1984
- Life-style and health: Some remarks on different viewpointsSocial Science & Medicine, 1984
- Life Events, Social Network, Life-Style, and Health: An Analysis of the 1979 National Survey of Personal Health Practices and ConsequencesHealth Education Quarterly, 1984
- Type A behavior: An ecological approachJournal of Behavioral Medicine, 1983
- Myocardial infarction risk and psychosocial work environment: An analysis of the male Swedish working forceSocial Science & Medicine, 1982