Deelnemers

Heb je een vraag? Neem gerust contact met ons op.

Contact met Lifelines

Researchers

Do you have a question regarding working with Lifelines? Please contact us, we're happy to help you.

Contact us

Pers

We voorzien media graag van informatie en we behandelen graag verzoeken voor interviews, opnames en beeldmateriaal.

Stuur een e-mail

Contact

The moderating role of psychosocial work factors in the association between menopausal symptoms and work impairment

Objectives: Menopausal symptoms are common and can negatively affect women's work functioning. Psychosocial work factors may play a role in how women experience these symptoms and their consequences on work. This study aims to examine the association between menopausal symptoms and work impairment, and whether psychosocial work factors moderate this association among peri- and postmenopausal women.

Methods: Data from 9490 peri- and postmenopausal women participating in the Dutch Lifelines cohort were used. Measures included self-reported menopausal symptoms, psychosocial work factors (job demands, work pace, influence at work, job insecurity, social support from colleagues, social support from supervisor, and job control), and work impairment. A two-part modeling approach was applied: logistic regression to estimate the likelihood of reporting any work impairment and a generalized linear model to assess the severity of impairment among those affected. Interaction terms tested whether psychosocial work factors moderated the association between menopausal symptoms and work impairment.

Results: Experiencing more severe menopausal symptoms was associated with both an increased likelihood [odds ratio (OR) 3.04, 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.84-3.26] and greater severity [Exp(β) 1.18, 95% CI 1.15-1.20] of work impairment. No moderating effects were found for most psychosocial work factors. Only job demands moderated the association between menopausal symptoms and the severity of impairment, with the association being stronger among women with high job demands than those with low demands.

Conclusion: Menopausal symptoms contribute to both the presence and severity of work impairment. Although high job demands amplify this association, workplace strategies should support menopausal women across all work conditions.

Year of publication

2026

Journal

Scandinavian journal of work, environment and health

Author(s)

Clevis, M.G.A.
van Oostron, S.H.
Loef, B.
MenoPause Consortium
van Valkengoed, I.G.M.
Nieuwenhuijsen, K.
Proper, K.I.

Full publication

Click here to view the full publicationClick here to view the full publication

Tags