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. 2019 Sep 17;76(11):793–800. doi: 10.1136/oemed-2019-105974

Table 1.

Background characteristics of the study population

Men (n=574 617) Women (561 037)
N % N %
Age at baseline
 30–34 84 505 14.7 70 793 12.6
 35–39 98 333 17.1 89 474 15.9
 40–44 103 426 18.0 100 594 17.9
 45–49 100 661 17.5 102 908 18.3
 50–54 97 177 16.9 102 183 18.2
 55–59 90 515 15.8 95 085 16.9
Education
 Tertiary 198 936 34.7 252 068 45.0
 Secondary 251 862 43.8 217 190 38.7
 Primary 123 819 21.5 91 779 16.3
Major occupational group
 Managers 33 383 5.8 15 887 2.8
 Professionals 100 418 17.5 104 007 18.5
 Technicians 103 465 18.0 124 689 22.2
 Office and customer workers 19 867 3.5 77 626 13.8
 Shop, sales and service workers 35 800 6.2 133 400 23.8
 Agricultural workers 34 425 6.0 18 183 3.2
 Construction, metal and wood workers 120 951 21.0 11 820 2.1
 Machine operators and assemblers 91 159 15.9 24 861 4.4
 Unskilled manual workers 35 149 6.1 50 564 9.0
Employment sector
 Private 382 138 66.5 251 858 44.9
 Public 98 111 17.1 258 930 46.2
 Other, including self-employed 94 368 16.4 50 249 9.0
Selected industrial sectors
 Manufacturing 156 548 27.2 63 507 11.3
 Transportation and storage 62 083 10.8 22 362 4.0
 Human health and social work activities 19 763 3.4 161 253 28.7
Physical work load factors
 Physically heavy work 207 977 36.2 147 485 26.3
 Heavy lifting 121 886 21.2 46 773 8.3
 Working in a forward bent posture 199 282 34.7 177 791 31.7
 Working with hands above shoulder level 105 962 18.4 51 840 9.2
 Work demanding high handgrip forces 196 191 34.1 39 513 7.0
Psychosocial work-related factors
 High job demands 214 826 37.4 196 627 35.1
 Low job control 331 106 57.6 300 553 53.6
 Monotonous work 118 513 20.6 82 296 14.7