TY - JOUR
T1 - Sex, gender and women's occupational health
T2 - The importance of considering mechanism
AU - Messing, Karen
AU - Mager Stellman, Jeanne
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was supported by grants to KM from the Centers of Excellence in Women's Health Program of Health Canada and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. KM is recipient of a Senior Investigator Award from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. The authors thank Stephanie Premji for able technical and substantive assistance.
PY - 2006/6
Y1 - 2006/6
N2 - A number of researchers have pointed out that less is known about occupational determinants of health in women than in men. The authors examine inventories of ongoing Canadian research and of recent scientific publications in order to identify trends in the approaches used to study women's occupational health (WOH). We also consider conceptual issues in the treatment of the sex and gender of subjects. We observe that women have been the subject of relatively few investigations of occupational health in the natural or biomedical sciences and that studies of WOH have concentrated on the health care professions and on psychosocial stressors, with a deficit in toxicological and physiological studies. We use recent studies of mercury exposure in chloralkali process plants and of musculoskeletal disorders among office workers to provide specific examples of problems in conceptualizing WOH. We propose that WOH be studied more often, especially by researchers in the natural and biomedical sciences, and that such studies include both women and men, where possible, and consider the complex relationships of gender and sex to the pathways involved. More interdisciplinary research would facilitate this process, since social researchers have tended to focus more on gender/sex issues. Our findings demonstrate that it is necessary to explore the implications of using sex routinely as an explanatory variable in occupational health research and to increase emphasis on the mechanisms involved in any sex or gender differences sought or found. From an equity perspective, it is also important to situate biological sex differences so as to prevent them from being used erroneously to justify job segregation or inequitable health promotion measures.
AB - A number of researchers have pointed out that less is known about occupational determinants of health in women than in men. The authors examine inventories of ongoing Canadian research and of recent scientific publications in order to identify trends in the approaches used to study women's occupational health (WOH). We also consider conceptual issues in the treatment of the sex and gender of subjects. We observe that women have been the subject of relatively few investigations of occupational health in the natural or biomedical sciences and that studies of WOH have concentrated on the health care professions and on psychosocial stressors, with a deficit in toxicological and physiological studies. We use recent studies of mercury exposure in chloralkali process plants and of musculoskeletal disorders among office workers to provide specific examples of problems in conceptualizing WOH. We propose that WOH be studied more often, especially by researchers in the natural and biomedical sciences, and that such studies include both women and men, where possible, and consider the complex relationships of gender and sex to the pathways involved. More interdisciplinary research would facilitate this process, since social researchers have tended to focus more on gender/sex issues. Our findings demonstrate that it is necessary to explore the implications of using sex routinely as an explanatory variable in occupational health research and to increase emphasis on the mechanisms involved in any sex or gender differences sought or found. From an equity perspective, it is also important to situate biological sex differences so as to prevent them from being used erroneously to justify job segregation or inequitable health promotion measures.
KW - Gender-based analysis
KW - Mercury
KW - Methodology
KW - Occupational health
KW - Sex
KW - Women
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/33646452273
U2 - 10.1016/j.envres.2005.03.015
DO - 10.1016/j.envres.2005.03.015
M3 - Article
C2 - 16709471
AN - SCOPUS:33646452273
SN - 0013-9351
VL - 101
SP - 149
EP - 162
JO - Environmental Research
JF - Environmental Research
IS - 2
ER -