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Effect of night work on occurrence of cardiovascular diseases in health professionals


Authors: M. Šavelová 1;  M. Nakládalová 1;  E. Sovová 2;  L. Štěpánek 1;  M. Sovová 2;  L. Štěpánek 3;  M. Janošíková 1
Authors‘ workplace: Klinika pracovního lékařství, Lékařská fakulta Univerzity Palackého a Fakultní nemocnice Olomouc, přednostka doc. MUDr. Marie Nakládalová, Ph. D. 1;  Klinika tělovýchovného lékařství a kardiovaskulární rehabilitace, Lékařská fakulta Univerzity Palackého a Fakultní nemocnice Olomouc, přednostka prof. MUDr. Eliška Sovová, Ph. D., MBA 2;  Ústav biofyziky a informatiky, 1. LF Univerzity Karlovy, přednosta prof. MUDr. RNDr. Jiří Beneš, CSc. 3
Published in: Pracov. Lék., 70, 2018, No. 3-4, s. 94-98.
Category: Original Papers

Overview

Introduction:

Healthcare professionals are exposed to a number of risk factors, including night work. The present study aimed to assess whether the incidence of cardiovascular disease endpoints (EP) differs in night work performing and non-performing healthcare professionals, with respect to the previously established risk of developing cardiovascular disease (CVD).

Methods:

To a sample of 3,210 workers of a large hospital, a risk of CVD was assigned according to the Framingham heart study between 2002 and 2007. For further evaluation, a group of healthcare professionals who had a given CVD risk above 10% (n = 240) was selected. In these individuals, data on the occurrence of EP in previous 10–15 years were found, the data were accessible to 175 people. A control group of 175 workers with a CVD risk below 10% was added to remove the influence of age and gender. The incidence of EP was compared in those performing and non-performing night work with regard to the overall risk of CVD.

Results:

In the group of 175 workers with CVD risk above 10%, there were 73 persons working at night, EP was recorded in 19.2% of them. In 102 night work non-performing healthcare professionals, the EP was recorded in 16.7% of them, the difference was not significant. In the control group, 82 healthcare professionals worked at night, 11.0% of them had EP, whereas 93 professionals of the group did not work at night, the EP was found at 10.8% of them, the difference was not statistically significant. A greater difference in the occurrence of EP was found when compared the EP incidence in a sample of night work performing professionals with CVD risk over 10% (19.2%) with a sample of night work non-performing professionals with CVD risk below 10% (10.7%), however, the difference was not significant (p = 0.1255) either.

Conclusion:

The incidence of EP was higher in night working healthcare professionals, especially in a connection with other risk factors of CVD, but the differences were not statistically significant. The limitation of the study is a small number of individuals in both groups. This issue requires further investigation.

Keywords:

night work – cardiovascular endpoint


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Labels
Hygiene and epidemiology Hyperbaric medicine Occupational medicine

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Occupational Medicine

Issue 3-4

2018 Issue 3-4

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