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  1. Article

    Open Access

    Cardiovascular mortality in a Swedish cohort of female industrial workers exposed to noise and shift work

    The aim was to study mortality due to cardiovascular disease as well as total mortality, among female industrial workers, and the association to occupational noise and shift work.

    Helena P. Eriksson, Mia Söderberg in International Archives of Occupational and… (2021)

  2. Article

    Open Access

    Working in preschool increases the risk of hearing-related symptoms: a cohort study among Swedish women

    To assess whether working in preschools increases the risk of hearing-related symptoms and whether age, occupational noise, and stressful working conditions affect the risk.

    Sofie Fredriksson, Jeong-Lim Kim in International Archives of Occupational and… (2019)

  3. Article

    Open Access

    Job strain and resting heart rate: a cross-sectional study in a Swedish random working sample

    Numerous studies have reported an association between stressing work conditions and cardiovascular disease. However, more evidence is needed, and the etiological mechanisms are unknown. Elevated resting heart ...

    Peter Eriksson, Linus Schiöler, Mia Söderberg, Annika Rosengren in BMC Public Health (2016)

  4. Article

    Open Access

    Psychosocial job conditions, fear avoidance beliefs and expected return to work following acute coronary syndrome: a cross-sectional study of fear-avoidance as a potential mediator

    Despite improvements in treatment, acute coronary syndrome remains a substantial cause for prolonged sick absences and premature retirement. Knowledge regarding what benefits return to work is limited, especia...

    Mia Söderberg, Annika Rosengren, Sara Gustavsson, Linus Schiöler in BMC Public Health (2015)

  5. Article

    Open Access

    Psychosocial work environment, job mobility and gender differences in turnover behaviour: a prospective study among the Swedish general population

    Throughout the literature, substantial evidence supports associations between poor psychosocial work characteristics and a variety of ill-health outcomes. Yet, few reports strategies workers carry out to impro...

    Mia Söderberg, Annika Härenstam, Annika Rosengren, Linus Schiöler in BMC Public Health (2014)

  6. Article

    Open Access

    A cross-sectional study of the relationship between job demand-control, effort-reward imbalance and cardiovascular heart disease risk factors

    This cross-sectional study explored relationships between psychosocial work environment, captured by job demand-control (JDC) and effort-reward imbalance (ERI), and seven cardiovascular heart disease (CHD) ris...

    Mia Söderberg, Annika Rosengren, Jenny Hillström, Lauren Lissner in BMC Public Health (2012)