Gunnar AronssonProfessor emeritus
Om mig
Mitt övergripande forskningsperspektiv handlar om sambandet mellan arbetets organisering och stress och hälsa. Aktuella studier handlar om hur individer konstruerar gränser i "gränslösa arbeten", återhämtning stress och hälsa, sjuknärvaro och sjukfrånvaro, rörlighet på arbetsmarknaden ur hälsosynpunkt.
Valda publikationer inom olika forskningsområden
Precarious work - permanent and temporary employment contract
Aronsson, G. (1999). Contingent workers and health and safety. Work, Employment & Society, 13(3), 439-459.
wes.sagepub.com/content/13/3/439.full.pdf+html
Aronsson, G. (2001). A new employment contract. Scand J Work Environ Health, 27(6), 361-364.
www.jstor.org/stable/40967150
Aronsson, G., Dallner, M., & Gustafsson, K. (2002). Work environment and health in different types of temporary jobs. European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology, 11(2), 151-175.
www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13594320143000898
Aronsson, G., Dallner, M., Lindh, T., & Göransson, S. (2005). Flexible pay but fixed expenses: personal, financial strain among on-call employees. International Journal of Health Services, 35(3), 499-528.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16119573
Aronsson, G. (2007). Rörlighet, inlåsning och hälsa. In K. Åkerlund (red). Rörlighet för ett dynamiskt arbetsliv. Vinnovarapport 2007:9, sid 7-13.
www.vinnova.se/upload/epistorepdf/vr-07-09.pdf
Sickness absenteeism, disability and early retirement from working life
Göransson, S., Aronsson, G., & Melin, B. (2002). Vilja och villkor - en studie om långtidssjukskrivnas situation. Ingår i Bilaga till SOU 2002:5. Handlingsplan för ökad hälsa i arbetslivet.
www.regeringen.se/sb/d/108/a/2747
Floderus, B., Göransson, S., Alexandersson, K., & Aronsson, G. (2005). Self-estimated life situation in patients on long-term sick leave. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 37, 291-299.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16203618
Astvik, W., Mellner, C., & Aronsson, G. (2006). På väg. En kvalitativ studie av långtidssjukskrivning, arbete och rörlighet. Arbete och hälsa 2006:3. [English summary]
hdl.handle.net/2077/4377
Floderus, B., Hagman, M., Aronsson, G., Marklund, S., & Wikman, A. (2008). Self-reported Health in Mothers: the Impact of Age, and Socioeconomic Conditions. Women & Health, 47(2), 63-86.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18681101
Mellner, C., Astvik, W., & Aronsson, G. (2009). Vägar tillbaka - En uppföljningsstudie av psykologiska och praktiska förutsättningar för återgång i arbete via arbetsbyte efter långtidssjukskrivning med stöd av en arbetsgivarring. Arbete och Hälsa, 43(10). [English summary].
hdl.handle.net/2077/21414
Floderus, B., Hagman, M., Aronsson, G., Marklund, S., & Wikman, A. (2009). Work status, work hours and health in women with and without children. Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 66(10), 704-710.
oem.bmj.com/content/66/10/704.abstract
Floderus, B., Hagman, M., Aronsson, G., Marklund, S., & Wikman, A. (2011). Medically certified sickness absence with insurance benefits in women with and without children. The European Journal of Public Health. Advance Access, published March 30, 2011.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21450840
Floderus, B., Hagman, M., Aronsson, G., Gustafsson, K., Marklund, S., & Wikman, A. (2012). Disability pension in young women, with special emphasis on family structure and sickness absence: A dynamic cohort study. BMJ Open 2012:2: e000840.
10.1136/bmjopen-2012-000840
Gustafsson, K., Aronsson, G., Marklund, S., Wikman, A., & Floderus, B. (2013) Does Social Isolation and Low Societal Participation Predict Disability Pension? A Population Based Study. PLoS ONE 8(11): e80655.
10.1371/journal.pone.0080655
Gustafsson, K., Aronsson, G., Marklund, S., Wikman, A., & Floderus, B. (2014). Peripheral labour market position and risk of disability pension: a prospective population-based study. BMJ open, 4(8), e005230.
bmjopen.bmj.com/content/4/8/e005230.full
Gustafsson, K., Marklund, S., Aronsson, G., Wikman, A., & Floderus, B. (2015). Interaction effects of social isolation and peripheral work position on risk of disability pension: A prospective study of Swedish women and men. PLOS ONE, 10(6), e0130361.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4477982/
Lundberg, U., & Aronsson, G. (2016). Insatser på arbetsplatsen avgörande för sjukskrivna. In Å. Sandberg (red.), På jakt efter framtidens arbete - utmaningar i arbetets organisering och forskning (sid 91-93). Stockholm: Tankekedjan Tiden.
tankesmedjantiden.se (PDF)
Sickness presenteeism
Aronsson, G., Gustafsson, K., & Dallner, M. (2000). Sick but yet at work. An empirical study of sickness presenteeism. J Epidemiol Community Health, 54(7), 502-509.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1731716/?tool=pubmed
Aronsson, G., & Gustafsson, K. (2005). Sickness Presenteeism: Prevalence, Attendance-Pressure Factors, and an Outline of a Model for Research. Journal of Occupational Environment Medicine, 47(9), 958-956.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19504117
Bergström, G., Bodin, L., Hagberg, J., Aronsson, G., & Josephson, M. (2009). Sickness Presenteeism Today, Sickness Absenteeism Tomorrow? A Prospective Study on Sickness Presenteeism and Future Sickness Absenteeism. Journal of occupational and environmental medicine, 51(6), 629-638.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19448572
Bergström, G., Bodin, L., Hagberg, J., Lindh, T., Aronsson, G., & Josephson, M. (2009). Does sickness presenteeism have an impact on future general health? International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health, 82(10), 1179-90.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19504117
Aronsson, G., Gustafsson, K., & Mellner, C. (2011). Sickness presence, sickness absence, and self-reported health and symptoms. International Journal of Workplace Health Management, 4(3), 228-243.
10.1108/17538351111172590
Taloyan, M., Aronsson, G., Leineweber, C., Magnusson Hanson, L., Alexanderson, K., & Westerlund, H. (2012). Sickness Presenteeism predicts Suboptimal Self-rated Health and Sickness Absence: a nationally representative study of the working population of Sweden. PLOS ONE, September 2012, Volume 7, Issue 9, e44721.
www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0044721
Johansen, V., Aronsson, G., & Marklund, S. (2014). Positive and negative reasons for sickness presenteeism in Norway and Sweden: a cross-sectional survey. BMJ Open, 4, e004123.
10.1136/bmjopen-2013-004123
Marklund, S., Aronsson, G., Johansen, V., & Solheim, L.J. (2014). Previous sickness presence among long-term sick-listed in Norway and Sweden: A retrospective study of prevalence and self-reported reasons. International Journal of Social Welfare, 24(4), 376-387.
10.1111/ijsw.12143
Work organisation, stress and recovery
Aronsson, G., Svensson, L., & Gustafsson, K. (2003). Unwinding, recuperation and health among compulsory-school and high-school school teachers in Sweden. International Journal of Stress Management, 217-234.
psycnet.apa.org/index.cfm?fa=buy.optionToBuy&id=2003-09917-002
Aronsson, G., & Gustafsson, K. (2005). Vacation - Still an Issue of Workers' Protection? An Empirical Study of Vacation and Recuperation. International Journal of Health Services, 35(1), 143-169.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15759561
Gustafsson, K., Lindfors, P., Aronsson, G., & Lundberg U. (2008). Relationships between self-rating of recovery from work and morning salivary cortisol. Journal of Occupational Health, 50, 24-30.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18285641
Aronsson, G., Bejerot, E., & Härenstam, A. (2012). Onödiga och oskäliga arbetsuppgifter bland läkare. Samband mellan illegitima arbetsuppgifter och stress kartlagt i enkätstudie. Läkartidningen, 48, 2216-2219.
Fulltext in Swedish [PDF]
Aronsson, G., Astvik, W., & Gustafsson, K. (2013). Work Conditions, Recovery and Health: A Study among Workers within Pre-School, Home Care and Social Work. British Journal of Social Work, 1-19.
10.1093/bjsw/bct036.
Theorell, T., Hammarström, A., Aronsson, G., Bendz, L. T., Grape, T., Hogstedt, C., ... & Hall, C. (2015). A systematic review including meta-analysis of work environment and depressive symptoms. BMC public health, 15(1), 738.
bmcpublichealth.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12889-015-1954-4
Stengård, J., Bernhard-Oettel, C., Berntson, E., Leineweber, C., & Aronsson, G. (2016). Stuck in a job: being "locked-in" or at risk of becoming locked-in at the workplace and well-being over time. Work & Stress, 1-21.
www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/02678373.2016.1163804
Ericsson, U., Rydstedt, L.W., Pettersson, P., Augustinsson, S., & Aronsson, G. (2016). Återhämtning bland hockeyspelare i Tre Kronor, nattarbetande bagare och skolledare - om asocialitet, sömnlösa nätter och allvarsam lek - en dygnsberättelse. Arbetsliv i omvandling, nr 2, 7-39.
journals.lub.lu.se/index.php/aio/issue/view/2421
Aronsson, G., & Mellner, C. (2016). Illegitima arbetsuppgifter och identitet - en introduktion. Arbetsmarknad & Arbetsliv, 22(3/4), 28-46.
kau.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:1056549/FULLTEXT01.pdf [PDF]
Boundaryless work - work without boundaries
Allvin, M., Aronsson, G., Hagström, T., Johansson, G., & Lundberg, U. (2011). Work without Boundaries. Psychological Perspectives on the New Working Life. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell (263 pp).
eu.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-0470666145.html
Allvin, M., Mellner, C., Movitz, F., & Aronsson, G. (2013). The Diffusion of Flexibility: Estimating the Incidence of Low-Regulated Working Conditions. Nordic Journal of Working Life Studies, 3, 99-116.
www.nordicwl.com/?p=1100
Allvin, M., & Aronsson, G. (2013). Flexibility, Boundarylessness and the Strategies of Work. In Å. Sandberg (ed.). Nordic Lights. Work, Management and Welfare in Scandinavia (pp. 420-435). SNS förlag.
Mellner, C., Aronsson, G., & Kecklund, G. (2014). Boundary Management Preferences, Boundary Control, and Work-Life Balance among Full-Time Employed Professionals in Knowledge-Intensive, Flexible Work. Nordic J of Working Life Studies, 4(4), nov 2014.
www.nordicwl.com/?s=mellner
Tucker, P., Bejerot, E., Kecklund, G., Aronsson, G., & Åkerstedt, T. (2015). The impact of work time control on physicians' sleep and well-being. Applied ergonomics, 47, 109-116.
www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003687014001616
Positive psychology - long term health
Aronsson, G. (2008). Relationship between a behavioral measure of good long-term health and self-rated health. In M. Christensen (ed.). Positive Factors at Work - The First report of the Nordic Project (pp. 66-69). Nordic Council of Ministers.
www.norden.org/sv/publikationer/publikationer/2008-501
Aronsson, G., & Gustafsson, K. (2009). Relationship between a long-term health measure and self-rated health and symptoms in the Swedish working population In M. Christensen (Ed.), Validation and test of central concepts in positive work and organizational psychology. The second report from the Nordic project Positive factors at work. TemaNord 2009:564, (pp 59-63).
www.norden.org/sv/publikationer/publikationer/2009-564
Aronsson, G., Gustafsson, K., & Hakanen, J. (2009). Conclusions. In M. Christensen (Ed.), Validation and test of central concepts in positive work and organizational psychology. The second report from the Nordic project Positive factors at work. TemaNord 2009:564, (pp. 93-96).
www.norden.org/sv/publikationer/publikationer/2009-564
Aronsson, G., & Blom, V. (2010). Work conditions for workers with good long-term health. International Journal of Workplace Health Management, 3, 160-172.
www.emeraldinsight.com/journals.htm?articleid=1865366
Christensen, M., Aronsson, G., Borg, V., Clausen, T., Guthenberg, J., Hakanen, J., Lundberg, L., & Straume, L.V. (2012). Building engagement and healthy organisations. Validation of the Nordic Questionnaire on Positive Organisational Psychology (N-POP). The Third Report from the Nordic Project. TemaNord 2012:549.
www.norden.org/en/publications/publikationer/2012-549/
Research strategies- interactive research
Allvin, M., & Aronsson, G. (2003). The Future of Work Environment Reforms. Does the concept of Work Environment Apply within the New Economy. International Journal of Health Services, 33(1), 99-111.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12641266
Svensson, L., Eklund, J., Randle, H., & Aronsson, G. (2007). Interactive Research - an attempt to analyse two change programmes. International Journal of Action Research, 3(3), 250-277.
Publikationer
I urval från Stockholms universitets publikationsdatabas
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Sickness Absence and Sickness Presence Among Health and Care Employees in Sweden-Health Complaints, Health Behavior, and Future Long-Term Sickness Absence
2021. Magnus Helgesson (et al.). Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 63 (6), 514-520
ArtikelObjective: To describe if health complaints relate to health behavior in terms of sickness absence (SA) and sickness presence (SP) and to examine how complaints and health behavior predicts the risk for future long-term sickness absence (LTSA).
Methods: Data originates from work environment surveys 2001 to 2013 and SA registers 2002 to 2016 of 1838 nurses, 7430 care assistants, and 40,515 individuals in all other occupations. Descriptive and regression analyses were conducted.
Results: Physical complaints and high SA in combination with high SP increased the risk of LTSA among nurses and care assistants. Nurses' high SP and care assistants' high SA elevated the LTSA risk.
Conclusions: Strategies to reduce the reasons behind physical health complaints among health care workers are warranted. SP among nurses and SA among care assistants should be considered in the organization of their job demands.
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Favorable Working Conditions Related to Health Behavior Among Nurses and Care Assistants in Sweden-A Population-Based Cohort Study
2021. Magnus Helgesson (et al.). Frontiers In Public Health 9
ArtikelObjective: To analyze the associations between favorable physical and psychosocial work factors and health behavior among healthcare employees (nurses and care assistants) with health complaints.
Methods: The study was based on seven iterations (2001-2013) of a biennial Swedish work environment survey linked with data from public registers. In all, 7,180 healthcare employees, aged 16-64 years, who had reported health complaints, were included. Health behavior was operationalized through four combinations of sickness absence (SA) and sickness presence (SP): 'good health behavior' (Low SP/Low SA), 'recovery behavior' (Low SP/High SA), 'risk behavior' (High SP/Low SA), and 'poor health behavior' (High SP/High SA). Odds ratios (OR) were calculated by multinomial logistic regression with 95% confidence intervals (CI).
Results: After adjusting for socio-demographic factors, those who rarely worked in strenuous postures had an increased probability of having 'good health behavior' (OR range: nurses 1.72-2.02; care assistants 1.46-1.75). Those who rarely experienced high job demands had increased odds for having 'good health behavior' (OR: nurses 1.81; OR range: care assistants 1.67-2.13), while having good job control was found to be related to 'good health behavior' only among care assistants (OR range 1.30-1.68). In the full model, after also considering differences in health, none of the work environment indicators affected 'good health behavior' among nursing professionals. Among care assistants, rarely having heavy physical work and having low psychosocial demands remained significantly associated with 'good health behavior' (OR range: 1.24-1.58) and 'recovery behavior' (OR range: 1.33-1.70). No associations were found between favorable work environment factors and 'risk behavior' among the two groups of employees. However, positive assessments of the work situation were associated with 'good health behavior,' even after controlling for all confounders for both groups (OR range: 1.43-2.69).
Conclusions: 'Good health behavior' and 'recovery behavior' among care assistants were associated with favorable physical and psychosocial working conditions even when health was considered. This implies that reduced sickness presence and sickness absence among care assistants can be achieved through improved physical and psychosocial working conditions.
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A Resourceful Work Environment Moderates the Relationship between Presenteeism and Health
2020. Gunnar Bergström (et al.). International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17 (13)
ArtikelThe objective of this study was to investigate if the psychosocial work environment moderates the proposed negative impact of presenteeism on future general health. We expect that the negative impact of presenteeism on general health is weaker if the psychosocial work environment is resourceful, and more pronounced if the environment is stressful. Data were derived from the 2008-2018 biennial waves of the Swedish Longitudinal Occupational Survey of Health (SLOSH). The final analytic sample consisted ofn= 15,779 individuals. We applied repeated measures regression analyses through generalized estimating equations (GEE). Results from the autoregressive GEE models showed statistically significant interaction terms between presenteeism and all four investigated moderators, i.e., job demands, job control, job support and job strain. The results indicate that the psychosocial work environment moderates the negative association between presenteeism and general health and illustrates a buffering effect of the psychosocial work environment. A possible explanation for these results may be that psychosocially resourceful work environments give room for adjustments in the work situation and facilitate recovery. The results also indicate that by investing the psychosocial work environment employers may be able to promote worker health as well as prevent reduced job performance due to presenteeism.
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The changing nature of work - Job strain, job support and sickness absence among care workers and in other occupations in Sweden 1991-2013
2021. Gunnar Aronsson (et al.). SSM - Population Health 15
ArtikelThis study examined exposure changes in three psychosocial dimensions - job demands, job control, and social support - and the associations between these dimensions and sickness absence throughout the period 1991-2013. The analyses covered periods of economic ups and downs in Sweden and periods involving major fluctuations in sickness absence. Data on care workers (n = 16,179) and a comparison group of employees in other occupations (n = 82,070) were derived from the biennial Swedish Work Environment Survey and linked to register data on sickness absence. Eight exposure profiles, based on combinations of demands, control, and support, were formed. The proportion of individuals with work profiles involving high demands doubled among care workers (14%-29%) while increasing modestly in the comparison group (17%-21%) 1991-2013. The work profile that isolated high-strain (iso-strain), i.e., high demands, low control, and low social support, was more prevalent among care workers, from 4% in 1991 to 11% in 2013. Individuals with work profiles involving highdemand jobs had the highest number of days on sickness absence during the study period and those with the isostrain work profile had the highest increase in sickness absence, from 15 days per year during 1993-1994, to 42 days during 2000-2002. Employees with a passive work profile (low job demands and low job control) had the lowest rate and the lowest increase in sickness absence. Individuals with active work profiles, where high demands are supposed to be balanced by high job control, had a rather high increase in sickness days around 2000. A conclusion is that there is a long-term trend towards jobs with high demands. This trend is stronger among care workers than among other occupations. These levels of job demands seem to be at such a level that it is difficult to compensate for with higher job control and social support.
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Can a managerial intervention focusing on job demands, job resources, and personal resources improve the work situation of employees?
Eva Charlotta Nylén (et al.).
Knowledge regarding the effects on employees of occupational intervention programs targeting psychosocial factors at work, including job demands, job resources, and personal resources, is limited and existing studies show mixed findings. This study aimed to investigate potential effects on employees’ job demands (i.e., workload, unnecessary tasks, and unreasonable tasks), job resources (i.e., feedback, control, and goal clarity), and personal resources (i.e., signaling and limit-setting strategies) of an intervention targeting managers’ ways of improving the psychosocial work environment among their staff (SWEActManager). Questionnaire data from employees (n=40) of a Swedish municipality, whose managers (n=4) participated in the program, and referents (n=58 employees), were collected before and after the program. The program included four three-hour workshops delivered during a six-week period. Results from 2(group) x 2(time) ANOVAs showed that all three demands increased over time while job control decreased. There were no significant group effects. One interaction effect only was significant: Unnecessary tasks increased more among referents than in the intervention group. The few significant short-term effects probably relate to challenges in designing and implementing organizational interventions targeting managers, and evaluating their effects among subordinates. This study adds to the limited research regarding the effects of organizational psychosocial interventions including managers for their subordinates’ demands and resources in a changing working life.
Visa alla publikationer av Gunnar Aronsson vid Stockholms universitet