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A Study on Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Female Workers

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KMID : 0384920040130010059
ÃÖÀº¼÷ ( Choi Eun-Sook ) - Çѱ¹º¸°Ç»çȸ¿¬±¸¿ø

À±¼ø³ç ( Yun Soon-Nyung ) - ¼­¿ï´ëÇб³ °£È£´ëÇÐ

Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this study is to investigate cardiovascular risk factors, their interaction, degree of cardiovascular risk and to analyze the effects of related fcators in women workers.

Method: A Survey was conducted in 529 employed women in 36 workplaces from October 25, 2002 to December
12, 2002. The survey was distributed and collected by occupational health nurses working at work sites.

Result: The result were asmfollowings; The female workers had about 2 cardiovascular risk factors. 82.1% were not exercising more than 3 times a week, 45.9% reported noise-exposure, 38.2% had higher perceived stress, 25.4% were shift-workers, 10.4% were long-time workers(over 60hour/ week), 4.4% were frequent drinker, 3.9% were current smokers. The rate of obesity in measured as BMI greater than 25 was 4.0%. Many cardiovascular risk factors were correlated. Job-related and health behavior-related cardiovascular risk factors were correlated statistically. Expose to noise, reported perceived stress were powerful predictors in their degree of cardiovascular risk.

Conclusion: Based on the results of this study, cardiovascular prevention programs for women in workplace should be designed as a multifactorial approach, which include stress management and job-related risk factor management as essential components to be effective in addressing the needs of the population.
KeyWords
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Female workers, Cardiovascular risk factors
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