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💼 PDF Prevention Guide · $37

Workplace Stress & Cardiovascular Health

Job strain, long hours, shift work, burnout — the cardiovascular evidence base for occupational stress is rigorous and underused. This guide explains the two validated models of occupational cardiac risk, six physiological damage pathways, and the specific work situations with the strongest CV evidence.

✓ 5 pages✓ Demand-Control model✓ 6 CV mechanisms✓ Shift work risk✓ PDF download
$37
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  • Job strain and the 23% MI risk increase (n=200,000+)
  • Demand-Control and Effort-Reward Imbalance models explained
  • Six physiological pathways from job stress to heart disease
  • High-risk occupational situations with specific CV evidence
  • Burnout as a cardiac risk factor (2x AFib risk)
  • Evidence-based individual management strategies
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Job strain raises MI risk 23%. Working 55+ hours raises stroke risk 33%.

The Kivimaki meta-analysis of over 200,000 workers across 13 countries found job strain increases myocardial infarction risk by 23%. A separate analysis of 600,000 workers found that working 55+ hours per week raises coronary heart disease risk by 13% and stroke risk by 33%. These are not soft associations — they are as well-documented as many traditional risk factors.

Yet work history is rarely taken as clinical history. This guide explains why it should be, what the specific high-risk occupational situations are, and what individual-level strategies have evidence behind them.

What’s inside

23%
MI Risk Increase
Job strain raises myocardial infarction risk (Kivimaki meta-analysis, 200,000+ workers)
33%
Stroke Risk
Working 55+ hours/week raises stroke risk vs. standard working hours
2x
Burnout & AFib
Clinical burnout associated with approximately doubled atrial fibrillation risk

“I ask every patient what their work is like. Not as small talk — as clinical history. Job strain, long hours, shift work, burnout — these are cardiovascular risk factors with as much evidence behind them as some of the ones we measure with blood tests. They belong in the medical record.”

CN
Dr. Christabel Nyange, MD, MPH, FACC
Founder, ElinMed · Board-Certified Cardiologist

Common Questions

I work long hours but feel fine. Should I be concerned?
The cardiovascular effects of chronic long working hours are largely silent until they are not — elevated blood pressure, reduced heart rate variability, subclinical atherosclerosis. The 33% increased stroke risk from working 55+ hours is a population-level statistical finding that does not declare itself in individuals until an event occurs. The guide explains the mechanisms and what monitoring is appropriate for people in high-demand occupations.
Can exercise offset the cardiovascular damage from job stress?
Regular aerobic exercise is the most evidence-based individual buffer against occupational cardiovascular risk. It directly blunts the cortisol and heart rate response to psychological stressors, reduces inflammation, and improves sleep quality. However, it does not fully neutralize the damage from extreme work hours or shift work — particularly the circadian disruption pathway, which exercise cannot reverse. Exercise helps; it does not eliminate occupational risk.
What is "psychological detachment" and does it actually work?
Psychological detachment — fully disengaging from work during evenings and weekends, not checking email, not mentally rehearsing work problems — is the single most evidence-supported recovery strategy for occupational stress. Studies using heart rate variability as a marker of autonomic cardiac function have shown that workers who achieve psychological detachment recover cardiovascular function overnight and have lower resting stress markers the following morning. The challenge is behavioral, not conceptual.

Your work history belongs in your cardiac history.

The evidence-based guide to occupational cardiovascular risk.

Get Work Stress Guide — $37