U.S. Long-Haul Truck Driver Work Organization and the Association with Cardiometabolic Disease Risk
Keywords
Cardiometabolic disease (CMD), LHTD, obesity, work organization
Abstract
Work organization, including long working hours, irregular work schedules, and job stress, has been associated with increased cardiometabolic disease (CMD) risk for numerous working populations. The purpose of this study was to examine the associations between work hours, work schedules, job stress, and CMD risk for a sample of US long-haul truck drivers (LHTDs). A nonexperimental, descriptive, cross-sectional design was employed to collect survey and anthropometric data from 260 US LHTDs at a major truck stop. The mean BMI was 33.40 kg/m2 and mean waist circumference was 114.77 cm. Using logistic regression, researchers found longer work hours, especially greater than 11 hours daily, were associated with increased odds for an extremely high risk of CMD. Results support comprehensive and integrated approaches that address work organization, and in particular long working hours, to reduce drivers' CMD risk.
Publication Date
1-1-2017
Number of Pages
303-310
Document Type
Article
Language
English
Source Title
Archives of Environmental and Occupational Health
Volume
72
Issue
5
Copyright Status
Unknown
College
Rosen College of Hospitality Management
STARS Citation
Hege, Adam; Lemke, Michael Kenneth; Apostolopoulos, Yorghos; Perko, Mike; Sonmez, Sevil; and Strack, Robert, "U.S. Long-Haul Truck Driver Work Organization and the Association with Cardiometabolic Disease Risk" (2017). Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works. 690.
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/ucfscholar/690