4.7 Article

It's giving me the blues: A fixed-effects and g-formula approach to understanding job insecurity, sleep disturbances, and major depression

Journal

SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
Volume 297, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.114805

Keywords

Job insecurity; Sleep disturbances; Major depression; Causal mediation

Funding

  1. Nordforsk [75021]
  2. Swedish Research Council
  3. Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare [2019-01321]
  4. Stockholm Stress Center of Excellence
  5. NordForsk [75021] Funding Source: researchfish
  6. Forte [2019-01321] Funding Source: Forte

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Research suggests that job insecurity increases the risk of major depression, possibly through sleep disturbances. This study explores the causal relationship between job insecurity and major depression, as well as the mediating role of sleep disturbances. The findings indicate a primarily direct relationship between job insecurity and major depression, and intervening on job insecurity could reduce the prevalence of major depression at the population level, although there is uncertainty surrounding the indirect pathway.
Research suggests that work-related factors like job insecurity increases the risk of major depression (MD), although it is unclear whether the association is causal. Research further suggests that job insecurity increases sleep disturbances, which is also a risk factor for MD. Based on current knowledge, it is possible that job insecurity operates through sleep disturbances to affect MD, but this pathway has not been examined in the literature. The current study extends the literature by using two complementary, counterfactual approaches (i.e., random- and fixed-effects regression and a mediational g-formula) to examine whether job insecurity causes MD and whether sleep disturbances mediate the relationship. A methodological triangulation approach allowed us to adjust for unobserved and intermediate confounding, which has not been addressed in prior research. Findings suggest that the relationship between job insecurity and MD is primarily direct, that hypothetically intervening on job insecurity (in our g-formula) would reduce MD by approximately 10% at the population level, and this relationship operates via sleep disturbances to some degree. However, the indirect pathway had a high degree of uncertainty.

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