Precarious employment: understanding an emerging social determinant of health.

J Benach, A Vives, M Amable, C Vanroelen, G Tarafa, C Muntaner
Author Information
  1. J Benach: Health Inequalities Research Group, Employment Conditions Knowledge Network (GREDS-EMCONET), Department of Political and Social Sciences, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona 08003, Spain; email: joan.benach@upf.edu , alvives@med.puc.cl , marcelo.amable@gmail.com , cvroelen@vub.ac.be , gemma.tarafa@upf.edu , carles.muntaner@utoronto.ca.

Abstract

Employment precariousness is a social determinant that affects the health of workers, families, and communities. Its recent popularity has been spearheaded by three main developments: the surge in "flexible employment" and its associated erosion of workers' employment and working conditions since the mid-1970s; the growing interest in social determinants of health, including employment conditions; and the availability of new data and information systems. This article identifies the historical, economic, and political factors that link precarious employment to health and health equity; reviews concepts, models, instruments, and findings on precarious employment and health inequalities; summarizes the strengths and weaknesses of this literature; and highlights substantive and methodological challenges that need to be addressed. We identify two crucial future aims: to provide a compelling research program that expands our understanding of employment precariousness and to develop and evaluate policy programs that effectively put an end to its health-related impacts.

MeSH Term

Economic Recession
Employment
Epidemiologic Research Design
Epidemiologic Studies
Global Health
Health Services
Health Status
Health Status Disparities
Humans
Mental Health
Politics
Public Assistance
Social Determinants of Health

Word Cloud

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