The Prevalence and Health Impacts of Frequent Work Discrimination and Harassment among Women Firefighters in the US Fire Service

Intro. Both discrimination and harassment directly impact mental and physical health. Further, workplace discrimination degrades workplace culture and negatively impacts health behaviors, job-related outcomes, and family dynamics. Women represent a small proportion of the fire service and are often...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sara A. Jahnke, Christopher K. Haddock, Nattinee Jitnarin, Christopher M. Kaipust, Brittany S. Hollerbach, Walker S. C. Poston
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2019-01-01
Series:BioMed Research International
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/6740207
id doaj-749afc47a59c402686d8f1b332beee20
record_format Article
spelling doaj-749afc47a59c402686d8f1b332beee202020-11-24T23:56:38ZengHindawi LimitedBioMed Research International2314-61332314-61412019-01-01201910.1155/2019/67402076740207The Prevalence and Health Impacts of Frequent Work Discrimination and Harassment among Women Firefighters in the US Fire ServiceSara A. Jahnke0Christopher K. Haddock1Nattinee Jitnarin2Christopher M. Kaipust3Brittany S. Hollerbach4Walker S. C. Poston5Institute for Biobehavioral Health Research, National Development & Research Institutes, 1920 W. 143rd Street, Suite 120, Leawood, KS 66224, USAInstitute for Biobehavioral Health Research, National Development & Research Institutes, 1920 W. 143rd Street, Suite 120, Leawood, KS 66224, USAInstitute for Biobehavioral Health Research, National Development & Research Institutes, 1920 W. 143rd Street, Suite 120, Leawood, KS 66224, USAInstitute for Biobehavioral Health Research, National Development & Research Institutes, 1920 W. 143rd Street, Suite 120, Leawood, KS 66224, USAInstitute for Biobehavioral Health Research, National Development & Research Institutes, 1920 W. 143rd Street, Suite 120, Leawood, KS 66224, USAInstitute for Biobehavioral Health Research, National Development & Research Institutes, 1920 W. 143rd Street, Suite 120, Leawood, KS 66224, USAIntro. Both discrimination and harassment directly impact mental and physical health. Further, workplace discrimination degrades workplace culture and negatively impacts health behaviors, job-related outcomes, and family dynamics. Women represent a small proportion of the fire service and are often the targets of discrimination/harassment, yet little research documents the impact of such experiences. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the relationship between chronic work discrimination and/or harassment and women firefighters’ (FFs) physical and mental health, substance abuse, and job efficacy, stress, and satisfaction. Methods. Snowball sampling was used to solicit participation from women career FFs. Participants completed an online survey regarding physical and mental health, health behavior, job efficacy/stress/satisfaction, and family well-being. Logistic regression examined the impact of work discrimination-harassment severity on dichotomous variables. Results. 1,773 had complete data on their experiences with work-related discrimination and harassment. Women reported experiencing verbal (37.5%) and written (12.9%) harassment, hazing (16.9%), sexual advances (37.4%), and assaults (5.1%) in the fire service. FFs in the highest tertile of work discrimination-harassment severity reported over 40% more poor health days in the last 30 days (OR=1.42; 95%CI=1.33-1.51; p<0.001). Women who experienced moderate and severe discrimination/harassment had negative mental health outcomes including higher prevalence of depressive symptoms, anxiety, and PTSD symptoms. Those who experienced high rates of discrimination and/or harassment also were more likely to report issues with alcohol consumption. Conclusion. The impact of discrimination and harassment, related negative physical and mental outcomes, low levels of job satisfaction, and negative impact of these experiences on family/home stress likely take a significant toll on women in the fire service. Findings confirm and extend previous work suggesting there is a need to improve the mental and physical health of women FFs. Future work should examine the prospective relationship between discrimination/harassment and poor health outcomes and potential policies/practices to reduce these negative behaviors.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/6740207
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sara A. Jahnke
Christopher K. Haddock
Nattinee Jitnarin
Christopher M. Kaipust
Brittany S. Hollerbach
Walker S. C. Poston
spellingShingle Sara A. Jahnke
Christopher K. Haddock
Nattinee Jitnarin
Christopher M. Kaipust
Brittany S. Hollerbach
Walker S. C. Poston
The Prevalence and Health Impacts of Frequent Work Discrimination and Harassment among Women Firefighters in the US Fire Service
BioMed Research International
author_facet Sara A. Jahnke
Christopher K. Haddock
Nattinee Jitnarin
Christopher M. Kaipust
Brittany S. Hollerbach
Walker S. C. Poston
author_sort Sara A. Jahnke
title The Prevalence and Health Impacts of Frequent Work Discrimination and Harassment among Women Firefighters in the US Fire Service
title_short The Prevalence and Health Impacts of Frequent Work Discrimination and Harassment among Women Firefighters in the US Fire Service
title_full The Prevalence and Health Impacts of Frequent Work Discrimination and Harassment among Women Firefighters in the US Fire Service
title_fullStr The Prevalence and Health Impacts of Frequent Work Discrimination and Harassment among Women Firefighters in the US Fire Service
title_full_unstemmed The Prevalence and Health Impacts of Frequent Work Discrimination and Harassment among Women Firefighters in the US Fire Service
title_sort prevalence and health impacts of frequent work discrimination and harassment among women firefighters in the us fire service
publisher Hindawi Limited
series BioMed Research International
issn 2314-6133
2314-6141
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Intro. Both discrimination and harassment directly impact mental and physical health. Further, workplace discrimination degrades workplace culture and negatively impacts health behaviors, job-related outcomes, and family dynamics. Women represent a small proportion of the fire service and are often the targets of discrimination/harassment, yet little research documents the impact of such experiences. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the relationship between chronic work discrimination and/or harassment and women firefighters’ (FFs) physical and mental health, substance abuse, and job efficacy, stress, and satisfaction. Methods. Snowball sampling was used to solicit participation from women career FFs. Participants completed an online survey regarding physical and mental health, health behavior, job efficacy/stress/satisfaction, and family well-being. Logistic regression examined the impact of work discrimination-harassment severity on dichotomous variables. Results. 1,773 had complete data on their experiences with work-related discrimination and harassment. Women reported experiencing verbal (37.5%) and written (12.9%) harassment, hazing (16.9%), sexual advances (37.4%), and assaults (5.1%) in the fire service. FFs in the highest tertile of work discrimination-harassment severity reported over 40% more poor health days in the last 30 days (OR=1.42; 95%CI=1.33-1.51; p<0.001). Women who experienced moderate and severe discrimination/harassment had negative mental health outcomes including higher prevalence of depressive symptoms, anxiety, and PTSD symptoms. Those who experienced high rates of discrimination and/or harassment also were more likely to report issues with alcohol consumption. Conclusion. The impact of discrimination and harassment, related negative physical and mental outcomes, low levels of job satisfaction, and negative impact of these experiences on family/home stress likely take a significant toll on women in the fire service. Findings confirm and extend previous work suggesting there is a need to improve the mental and physical health of women FFs. Future work should examine the prospective relationship between discrimination/harassment and poor health outcomes and potential policies/practices to reduce these negative behaviors.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/6740207
work_keys_str_mv AT saraajahnke theprevalenceandhealthimpactsoffrequentworkdiscriminationandharassmentamongwomenfirefightersintheusfireservice
AT christopherkhaddock theprevalenceandhealthimpactsoffrequentworkdiscriminationandharassmentamongwomenfirefightersintheusfireservice
AT nattineejitnarin theprevalenceandhealthimpactsoffrequentworkdiscriminationandharassmentamongwomenfirefightersintheusfireservice
AT christophermkaipust theprevalenceandhealthimpactsoffrequentworkdiscriminationandharassmentamongwomenfirefightersintheusfireservice
AT brittanyshollerbach theprevalenceandhealthimpactsoffrequentworkdiscriminationandharassmentamongwomenfirefightersintheusfireservice
AT walkerscposton theprevalenceandhealthimpactsoffrequentworkdiscriminationandharassmentamongwomenfirefightersintheusfireservice
AT saraajahnke prevalenceandhealthimpactsoffrequentworkdiscriminationandharassmentamongwomenfirefightersintheusfireservice
AT christopherkhaddock prevalenceandhealthimpactsoffrequentworkdiscriminationandharassmentamongwomenfirefightersintheusfireservice
AT nattineejitnarin prevalenceandhealthimpactsoffrequentworkdiscriminationandharassmentamongwomenfirefightersintheusfireservice
AT christophermkaipust prevalenceandhealthimpactsoffrequentworkdiscriminationandharassmentamongwomenfirefightersintheusfireservice
AT brittanyshollerbach prevalenceandhealthimpactsoffrequentworkdiscriminationandharassmentamongwomenfirefightersintheusfireservice
AT walkerscposton prevalenceandhealthimpactsoffrequentworkdiscriminationandharassmentamongwomenfirefightersintheusfireservice
_version_ 1725457495205347328