Skip Navigation
Skip to contents

Ann Occup Environ Med : Annals of Occupational and Environmental Medicine

OPEN ACCESS
SEARCH
Search

Search

Page Path
HOME > Search
1 "Haiou Yang"
Filter
Filter
Article category
Keywords
Publication year
Authors
Review
A socioecological framework for research on work and obesity in diverse urban transit operators based on gender, race, and ethnicity
BongKyoo Choi, Peter Schnall, Marnie Dobson, Haiou Yang, Dean Baker, YoungJu Seo
Ann Occup Environ Med 2017;29:15.   Published online May 17, 2017
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s40557-017-0171-2
AbstractAbstract PDFPubReaderePub

Urban transit (bus and rail) operators, totaling nearly 700,000 persons, are one of the heaviest occupational groups in the United States (US). Little is known about occupational risk factors for weight gain and obesity and their interrelationship with health-related behaviors, particularly among female minority (African Americans and Hispanics) transit operators who are at greater risk for obesity. As a step towards developing successful obesity interventions among urban transit operators, this paper aims to present a new socioecological framework for studying working conditions, chronic strain, health-related behaviors, weight gain/obesity, and obesity disparity in diverse urban transit operators based on gender, race, and ethnicity. Our framework is a synthesis of several different theories and disciplines: the resource-work load model (work stress), occupational ergonomics, the theory of intersectionality, and worksite health promotion. The framework was developed utilizing an extensive literature review, results from our on-going research on obesity, input from focus groups conducted with Los Angeles transit operators as well as interviews and meetings with transit operator stakeholders (management, unions, and worksite transit wellness program), and ride-along observations. Our hypotheses highlighted in the framework (see Fig. 1) are that adverse working conditions, largely characterized as a combination of high demands and low resources, will increase the risk for weight gain/obesity among transit operators directly through chronic strain and hypothalamic dysfunction (hyper-and hypo-activations), and indirectly through health-related behaviors and injuries/chronic severe pain. We also hypothesize that the observed increase in adiposity among female minority operators is due to their greater exposure to adverse occupational and non-occupational conditions that reflect their intersecting social identities of lower social class and being a minority woman in the US. Our proposed framework could greatly facilitate future transit worksite obesity studies by clarifying the complex and important roles of adverse working conditions in the etiology of weight gain/obesity and obesity disparity among transit operators and other working populations.


Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Facilitators and barriers to achieving dietary and physical activity goals: focus group interviews with city bus drivers and counseling dietitians
    Yongmin Jo, Suhyeun Cho, Young-Hee Han, Taisun Hyun
    Korean Journal of Community Nutrition.2023; 28(5): 376.     CrossRef
  • Primary Prevention of Weight Gain Among New Bus Operators
    Ryan Olson, Sean P. M. Rice, Talya N. Bauer, Brad Wipfli, W. Kent Anger, Todd Bodner, Peter Graven, Leah S. Greenspan
    Journal of Occupational & Environmental Medicine.2023; 65(2): 128.     CrossRef
  • Bus Operators’ Body Weight Changes During Their First 2 Years of Work
    Ryan Olson, Sean P.M. Rice, Layla R. Mansfield, Brad Wipfli, Todd Bodner, W. Kent Anger, Talya N. Bauer
    Journal of Occupational & Environmental Medicine.2021; 63(12): 1093.     CrossRef
  • Burden of tobacco, kola nut and alcohol consumption and its association with periodontal disease, potentially malignant lesions and quality of life among bus drivers, Lagos State, Nigeria
    Afolabi Oyapero, Oyejoke Oyapero, Aliru Akinleye
    Population Medicine.2020;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Pilot test of an interactive obesity treatment approach among employed adults in a university medical billing office
    Rachel G. Tabak, Jaime R. Strickland, Bridget Kirk, Ryan Colvin, Richard I. Stein, Hank Dart, Graham A. Colditz, Ann Marie Dale, Bradley A. Evanoff
    Pilot and Feasibility Studies.2020;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Obesity and Socioeconomic Disparities
    Cecilia M. Jevitt
    Journal of Perinatal & Neonatal Nursing.2019; 33(2): 126.     CrossRef
  • Complejidad de la expresión de genes asociados a obesidad en el tejido adiposo humano
    Alejandra Rodríguez, Carlos Echandía, Adalberto Sánchez, José María Satizábal, Julio César Montoya, Felipe García Vallejo
    Revista Med.2019; 26(1): 14.     CrossRef
  • The Key Role of Work in Population Health Inequities
    Paul A. Landsbergis, BongKyoo Choi, Marnie Dobson, Grace Sembajwe, Craig Slatin, Linda Delp, C. Eduardo Siqueira, Peter Schnall, Sherry Baron
    American Journal of Public Health.2018; 108(3): 296.     CrossRef
  • Work stress and health problems of professional drivers: a hazardous formula for their safety outcomes
    Sergio A. Useche, Boris Cendales, Luis Montoro, Cristina Esteban
    PeerJ.2018; 6: e6249.     CrossRef
  • Work organization, health, and obesity in urban transit operators: A qualitative study
    Marnie Dobson, BongKyoo Choi, Peter L. Schnall
    American Journal of Industrial Medicine.2017; 60(11): 991.     CrossRef
  • 249 View
  • 1 Download
  • 8 Web of Science
  • 10 Crossref
Close layer

Ann Occup Environ Med : Annals of Occupational and Environmental Medicine
Close layer
TOP