People with job stress may lower their risk of heart disease by adapting a healthy lifestyle, a new study has found.
Researchers set out to determine whether a healthy lifestyle can help reduce the effects of job stress on coronary artery disease.
They looked at 7 cohort studies from a large European initiative that included 1,02,128 people who were disease-free during the 15-year study period (1985-2000).
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Of the total participants, 15,986 (16 per cent) reported job stress, which was determined from specific job-related questions in the studies.
The investigators defined three lifestyle categories based on smoking, alcohol consumption, physical activity/inactivity and obesity (body mass index).
A "healthy lifestyle" had no lifestyle risk factors, "moderately unhealthy lifestyle" had one risk factor and "unhealthy lifestyle" included 2-4 lifestyle risk factors.
A total of 1086 participants had incident events of coronary artery disease events during the follow-up period. The 10-year incidence of coronary artery disease was 18.4 per 1000 people for people with job strain and 14.7 for those without job strain.
People with an unhealthy lifestyle had a significantly higher 10-year incidence rate (30.6 per 1000) compared to those with a healthy lifestyle (12.0 per 1000).
The incidence rate was 31.2 per 1000 for participants with job strain and an unhealthy lifestyle but only 14.7 for those with job strain and a healthy lifestyle.
"The risk of coronary artery disease was highest among participants who reported job strain and an unhealthy lifestyle; those with job strain and a healthy lifestyle had about half the rate of this disease," said Mika Kivimaki, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London (UCL), London, UK.
"These observational data suggest that a healthy lifestyle could substantially reduce the risk of coronary artery disease risk among people with job strain," Kivimaki said.
The study was published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).