Research report
Wellbeing of professionals at entry into the labour market: a
follow up survey of medicine and architecture students
P Virtanena, A-M Koivistob
a Medical School,
33014 University of Tampere, Finland, b Tampere School of Public Health, University of
Tampere
Correspondence to: Dr Virtanen (pekka.j.virtanen{at}uta.fi)
Accepted for publication 27 April 2001
STUDY
OBJECTIVE
Knowledge about changes in wellbeing
during the passage from professional studies to working life is scarce
and controversial. This study examined these changes among university
graduates with good and poor employment prospects.
DESIGN
A longitudinal
study with four postal questionnaire surveys of a closed cohort.
SETTING
Cohorts of
graduating Finnish physicians and architects were followed up from 1994 to 1998. In 1994 Finland's national economy was still struggling to
break loose from a period of severe recession, and unemployment rates
were high even among educated professionals. As economic growth
eventually got under way the unemployment situation began to ease for
physicians but not for architects.
PARTICIPANTS
Architecture
students (n = 189) from Finland's three technical universities and
medical students (n = 638) from Finland's five medical faculties. Both
had started their studies in 1989.
RESULTS
In the first
questionnaire survey there were no differences between the professions
in strain resistance resources, as indicated by Sense of Coherence
(SOC), or in psychological distress, as indicated by General Health
Questionnaire (GHQ). Profession emerged as a significant between
subject factor in analysis of variance for repeated measures of both
SOC and GHQ. Physicians' scores on the 13 item SOC questionnaire
improved during the follow up from 62.6 to 67.5 and on the 12 item GHQ
questionnaire from 24.2 to 22.2. Among architects the corresponding
scores remained unchanged (62.5-62.2 and 23.1-22.6). The significance
of profession remained unchanged when gender and individuals'
graduation and total work experience were introduced to the statistical
models as between subject factors.
CONCLUSIONS
Improved
SOC in physicians but not in architects supports the hypothesis that
good employment prospects are important to employee wellbeing. Although
less consistent, indicating fluctuations in day to day psychological
distress, GHQ findings are also in line with the hypothesis. In both
professions the indicators studied were independent of individuals'
graduation and career. It is concluded that rather than individually,
the mechanisms that connect employment prospects with wellbeing operate
collectively within the whole profession. Highly educated professionals
do not complete their studies until almost 30, and if for reasons of
insecure employment they are unable to develop their SOC to the optimum level at that age, their resources for resisting health endangering strain may remain permanently poor.
Keywords: university graduates; employment insecurity; sense of coherence; general health questionnaire
© 2001 by Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
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