
Creative Work Has Health Advantages, Study Suggests
December 13, 2007By Glenda Fauntleroy, Contributing Writer
Health Behavior News Service
Employees who have more control over their daily activities and
can do challenging work that they enjoy are likely to be in better health, new
research suggests.
“The most important finding is that creative activity helps people stay
healthy,” said lead author John Mirowsky, a sociology professor with the
Population Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin. “Creative
activity is non-routine, enjoyable and provides opportunity for learning and for
solving problems. People who do that kind of work, whether paid or not, feel
healthier and have fewer physical problems.”
Moreover, although people who work give up some independence, the study found
that having a job does lead to better health.
“One thing that surprised us was that the daily activities of employed persons
are more creative than those of non-employed persons of the same sex, age and
level of education,” Mirowsky said.
The study, which appears in the December issue of the Journal of Health and
Social Behavior, comprised 2,592 adults who responded to a 1995 national
telephone survey; researchers followed up respondents in 1998. The survey
addressed general health, physical functioning, how people spent their time on a
daily basis and whether their work, even if unpaid, gave them a chance to learn
new things or do things they enjoy.
“The health advantage of being somewhat above average in creative work [in the
60th percentile] versus being somewhat below average [in the 40th percentile] is
equal to being 6.7 years younger,” Mirowsky said. It is also equal to having
two more years of education or 15 times greater household income, he added.
Although the authors did not examine specific job positions that could confer
this health advantage, professions considered not to involve a “creative”
environment were those such as assembly lines.
Rather, jobs that are high-status, with managerial authority, or that require
complex work with data generally provide more access to creative work, Mirowsky
said. However, he added, “People with a wide variety of jobs manage to find
ways to make them creative.”
# # #
FOR MORE INFORMATION
Health Behavior News Service: Lisa Esposito at (202) 387-2829 or hbns-editor@cfah.org
The Journal of Health and Social Behavior is the quarterly journal of the
American Sociological Association. Contact Sujata Sinha, Media Relations Officer
at (202) 247-9871 or ssinha@asanet.org
Mirowsky J, Ross CE. Creative work and health. J Health Soc Behav 48(4),
2007.
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829 or www.hbns.org.
Center for the Advancement of
Health
Health Behavior News Service
Contact: Lisa Esposito, Editor
202.387.2829
hbns-editor@cfah.org