Toggle navigation
Join
Login
Home
DVDs
Journals
Online videos
Databases
Posters
Safety tools
Standards
All Words
Any Words
Exact Match
Books
DVDs
Online
Standards
Advanced search
Back to Search Results
Gender differences in the effect of weekly working hours on occupational injury risk in the United States working population.
Call no.:
JNL SCA
Find this in:
Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health: 2012, 38, n. 4 - July
Year:
2012
Type:
Journal Article
Subject:
Hours of work
;
Gender
Related Items
Related Catalogue Items
Other items related to this item are:
Source
Result
Link
Title
Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health
(Journals)
Similar Items
Gender study finds overwork linked to higher risks of diabetes in women, not men.
Are long work hours a health risk?
Long work hours and health : review
Can we cope with a shortage of time at work?
Impact of worktime arrangements on work-home interference among Dutch employees.
Gender differences in the relations between work-related physical and psychosocial risk factors and musculoskeletal complaints.
Working overtime hours : relations with fatigue, work motivation, and the quality of work.
Gender Differences in Self-Reported Physical and Psychosocial Exposures in Jobs With Both Female and Male Workers.
Managing shiftworkers' OHS : the role of employment contracts.
Long working hours and OHS : what have we learned?