Failed reciprocity in close social relationships and health: findings from the Whitehall II study.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] Carol A. Trujillo,et al. The MOS 36-Item Short Form Health Survey: reliability, validity, and preliminary findings in schizophrenic outpatients. , 1998, Medical care.
[2] M. Marmot,et al. Sickness absence in the Whitehall II study, London: the role of social support and material problems. , 1995, Journal of epidemiology and community health.
[3] J. Medalie,et al. Angina pectoris among 10,000 men. II. Psychosocial and other risk factors as evidenced by a multivariate analysis of a five year incidence study. , 1976, The American journal of medicine.
[4] M. Marmot,et al. Deriving a survey measure of social support: the reliability and validity of the Close Persons Questionnaire. , 1992, Social science & medicine.
[5] Stephanie L. Dickinson,et al. Hostile marital interactions, proinflammatory cytokine production, and wound healing. , 2005, Archives of general psychiatry.
[6] Paul E. Spector,et al. Negative affectivity as the underlying cause of correlations between stressors and strains. , 1991, The Journal of applied psychology.
[7] L. Berkman,et al. Social networks, host resistance, and mortality: a nine-year follow-up study of Alameda County residents. , 1979, American journal of epidemiology.
[8] C. Sherbourne,et al. The MOS 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36) , 1992 .
[9] J. Cacioppo,et al. Marital Conflict in Older Adults: Endocrinological and Immunological Correlates , 1997, Psychosomatic medicine.
[10] Mika Kivimäki,et al. When it is better to give than to receive: long-term health effects of perceived reciprocity in support exchange. , 2005, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[11] T. Harris,et al. Life events and illness , 1990 .
[12] M. Marmot,et al. Does conflict between home and work explain the effect of multiple roles on mental health? A comparative study of Finland, Japan, and the UK. , 2004, International journal of epidemiology.
[13] T. Chandola,et al. The measurement of effort-reward imbalance at work: European comparisons. , 2004, Social science & medicine.
[14] J. Siegrist. Social reciprocity and health: New scientific evidence and policy implications , 2005, Psychoneuroendocrinology.
[15] J. Siegrist,et al. Mangelnde Reziprozität in engen sozialen Beziehungen, Depressivität und eingeschränkte subjektive Gesundheit , 2004, Sozial- und Präventivmedizin.
[16] E. D. de Geus,et al. Effects of work stress on ambulatory blood pressure, heart rate, and heart rate variability. , 2000, Hypertension.
[17] Hans Bosma,et al. Reviewing the effort-reward imbalance model: drawing up the balance of 45 empirical studies. , 2005, Social science & medicine.
[18] Andrew Steptoe,et al. Effort–Reward Imbalance, Overcommitment, and Measures of Cortisol and Blood Pressure Over the Working Day , 2004, Psychosomatic medicine.
[19] Johannes Siegrist,et al. Reported nonreciprocity of social exchange and depressive symptoms. Extending the model of effort-reward imbalance beyond work. , 2003, Journal of psychosomatic research.
[20] N. Kawakami,et al. A review of empirical studies on the model of effort-reward imbalance at work: reducing occupational stress by implementing a new theory. , 2004, Social science & medicine.
[21] M. Ariizumi,et al. Stress buffering effects of social support on depressive symptoms in middle age: Reciprocity and community mental health , 2006, Psychiatry and clinical neurosciences.
[22] Y. Jou,et al. Stress, Health, and Reciprocity and Sufficiency of Social Support: The Case of University Students in Japan , 2002, The Journal of social psychology.
[23] Gower Street,et al. Health inequalities among British civil servants: the Whitehall II study , 1991, The Lancet.
[24] A. Gouldner. THE NORM OF RECIPROCITY: A PRELIMINARY STATEMENT * , 1960 .
[25] M. Marmot,et al. Socioeconomic position, health, and possible explanations: a tale of two cohorts. , 2002, American journal of public health.
[26] M. Marmot,et al. The impact of socioeconomic status on health functioning as assessed by the SF-36 questionnaire: the Whitehall II Study. , 1997, American journal of public health.
[27] R. Rose,et al. A scale for the estimation of sleep problems in clinical research. , 1988, Journal of clinical epidemiology.
[28] J. Siegrist. Reciprocity in basic social exchange and health: can we reconcile person-based with population-based psychosomatic research? , 1998, Journal of Psychosomatic Research.
[29] J. Medalie,et al. Angina pectoris among 10,000 men. 5 year incidence and univariate analysis. , 1973, The American journal of medicine.
[30] D. Shaw,et al. Social determinants of health, 2nd edn , 2008 .
[31] C. Hertzman,et al. A comparison between the effort-reward imbalance and demand control models , 2003, BMC public health.
[32] J. Siegrist. Adverse health effects of high-effort/low-reward conditions. , 1996, Journal of occupational health psychology.
[33] S A Stansfeld,et al. Social support and psychiatric sickness absence: a prospective study of British civil servants , 1997, Psychological Medicine.
[34] H. Keen,et al. MYOCARDIAL ISCHÆMIA, RISK FACTORS AND DEATH FROM CORONARY HEART-DISEASE , 1977, The Lancet.
[35] J Siegrist,et al. Two alternative job stress models and the risk of coronary heart disease. , 1998, American journal of public health.
[36] L. Hawkley,et al. Loneliness and Health: Potential Mechanisms , 2002, Psychosomatic medicine.
[37] M. Marmot,et al. Social support and social cohesion , 2005 .
[38] R. Mayou. Prediction of emotional and social outcome after a heart attack. , 1984, Journal of psychosomatic research.
[39] John E. Ware,et al. SF-36 physical and mental health summary scales : a user's manual , 1994 .
[40] M. Marmot,et al. Work characteristics and psychiatric disorder in civil servants in London. , 1995, Journal of epidemiology and community health.
[41] B. Netterstrøm,et al. Psychosocial factors at home and at work and levels of salivary cortisol , 2006, Biological Psychology.