Cardiovascular reaction to job stress in middle-aged train drivers.

Author(s)
Kozená, L. Frantík, E. & Horváth, M.
Year
Abstract

In this study, cardiovascular (CV) response to a standard laboratory challenge was compared to 24-hr noninvasive monitoring of heart rate (HR) and blood pressure (BP) in 30 healthy middle-aged train drivers. Laboratory stress test consisted of the orthostatic test, the cold pressor test, the Valsalva manoeuvre, the Stroop test, and the numerical square. In addition, the participants completed an extensive questionnaire on their health state and family health history, lifestyle, job stress, social and family support, personality characteristics, and health risk behaviours. In waking activities (leisure time, travelling to work, preparations for driving, and an uneventful driving) HR and systolic blood pressure (SBP), but not diastolic blood pressure (DBP), were normal (e.g., mean HR = 78.3, SBP = 128.6, and DBP = 92.3 during driving). In occasional stressful work situations, most participants reacted with a considerable rise in SBP and DBP (maximum values 201 for SBP and 126 for DBP). Interindividual differences in maximum BP reactions to emergency stress were predicted reliably by several psychological characteristics and by the CV reactions to the laboratory psychological challenge. The frequency, intensity, and persistence of psychological and physiological reactions to urgent situations appear to be more relevant measures of the health impact of psychological job stress than are the shift average values of physiological stress markers. (A)

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Publication

Library number
990950 ST [electronic version only]
Source

International Journal of Behavioral Medicine, Vol. 5 (1998), No. 4, p. 281-294, 19 ref.

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.