Worker health linked to well-being, wealth
Posted on: Thursday, 19 March 2009, 12:31 CDT
Employee well-being is a significant predictor of one's cardiovascular health as measured by pulse product, U.S. researchers suggest.
Thomas A. Wright of Kansas State University found a link between physical and mental well-being that employees and employers may be able to capitalize on -- because better employee health can translate into more productivity and wealth.
He said both physical and psychological well-being should be considered in terms of efficiency. One's psychological well-being is best considered in terms of an efficiency ratio -- the relative presence of positive emotions and the relative absence of negative emotions.
Likewise, Wright's research reintroduces an efficiency-based measure of cardiovascular health that challenges the traditional approach of focusing individually on systolic blood pressure, which measures the heart at work, and diastolic blood pressure, which measures the heart during the resting phase between heartbeats.
The composite cardiovascular measure -- pulse product -- is defined in terms of an efficiency-based ratio -- the difference between systolic and diastolic blood pressure, multiplied by the pulse rate and divided by 100.
Wright and colleagues found that while systolic and diastolic blood pressure measures were not individually related to psychological well-being, pulse product was. Levels of psychological well-being were more likely to have lower pulse products.
The preliminary findings, published in the Journal of Organizational Behavior, indicated that those with pulse product scores in the mid-40s and higher may have an increased risk for cardiovascular disease and should consider consulting a physician.
Source: United Press International
Related Articles
- Component Of Vegetable Protein Could Be Linked To Lower Blood Pressure
- Video: FDA approves Exforge HCT(R) - the Only High Blood Pressure Treatment to Combine Three Medications in a Single Pill
- Both Blood Pressures More Useful Together
- Significant Reductions in Mortality and Cardiovascular Events Shown Using Blood Pressure-Lowering Treatment in Those Aged 80 and Over
- Adding Lipitor Early to Effective Blood Pressure Treatment Provided a Significant Reduction in Heart Attacks or Deaths From Heart Attacks Over Five Years
- Obesity links depression and high blood pressure
- Coffee Might Help Women's Blood Pressure
- New Data Show Avandia(R) (Rosiglitazone Maleate) May Reduce Blood Pressure, an Important Cardiovascular Risk Factor, in Type 2 Diabetes Patients
- Drugs for High Blood Pressure Which Are Best?
- Impact of Changes in HbA^Sub 1c^, Lipids and Blood Pressure on Long- Term Outcomes in Type 2 Diabetes Patients: An Analysis Using the CORE Diabetes Model
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds