Social support, occupational stress, and health.

The present paper is concerned with the buffering hypothesis that social support ameliorate. the impact of occupational stress on job-related strain and health. Previous studies of this hypothesis have yielded conflicting results. Our purpose, therefore, is twofold. First, we summarize the literature in this area and review several studies in detail, all of which found main effects of social support on perceived occupational stress and on some health outcome measures. Three of the studies were specifically designed to examine the buffering effects of support. Of the three, two found little or no evidence for buffering (LaRocco and Jones, 1978a; Pinneau, 1975), whereas the third reported buffering effects (House and Wells, 1978). Second, we attempt to reconcile these different conclusions by reanalyzing one data set-first analyzed by Caplan et al. (1975) and then by Pinneau (1975)-using a moderated regression technique identical to that used in the LaRocco and Jones (1978a) and House and Wells (1978) studies. The data usedfor this analysis consist of a randomly stratified sample of men from 23 occupations (N 636). Our review andfindings support the buffering hypothesis for mental and physical health variables (anxiety, depression, irritation, and somatic symptoms), but, as in the previous three studies, fail to support the buffering hypothesis in regard to job-related strains (job dissatisfaction, boredom, dissatisfaction with work load).

[1]  J. Cassel,et al.  Psychosocial assets, life crisis and the prognosis of pregnancy. , 1972, American journal of epidemiology.

[2]  S Gore,et al.  The effect of social support in moderating the health consequences of unemployment. , 1978, Journal of health and social behavior.

[3]  Allan P. Jones,et al.  Co-worker and leader support as moderators of stress-strain relationships in work situations. , 1978 .

[4]  J. Cassel The contribution of the social environment to host resistance: the Fourth Wade Hampton Frost Lecture. , 1976, American journal of epidemiology.

[5]  N. Lin,et al.  Social support, stressful life events, and illness: a model and an empirical test. , 1979, Journal of health and social behavior.

[6]  S. Cobb Presidential Address-1976. Social support as a moderator of life stress. , 1976, Psychosomatic medicine.

[7]  D. R. Saunders Moderator Variables in Prediction , 1956 .

[8]  A. Macmillan The Health Opinion Survey: Technique for Estimating Prevalence of Psychoneurotic and Related Types of Disorder in Communities , 1957 .

[9]  G. Andrews,et al.  LIFE EVENT STRESS, SOCIAL SUPPORT, COPING STYLE, AND RISK OF PSYCHOLOGICAL IMPAIRMENT , 1978, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[10]  R. D. Caplan,et al.  Organizational stress and individual strain: A social-psychological study of risk factors in coronary heart disease among administrators, engineers, and scientists , 1971 .

[11]  I. Altman,et al.  Social and psychological factors in stress. , 1970 .

[12]  Robert P. Quinn,et al.  The 1972-73 quality of employment survey: Descriptive statistics, with comparison data from the 1969-70 survey of working conditions. , 1974 .

[13]  T. Langner A twenty-two item screening score of psychiatric symptoms indicating impairment. , 1962, Journal of health and human behavior.