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Journal Article

Citation

Evensen CT, Schulman MD, Runyan CW, Zakocs RC, Dunn KA. J. Adolesc. 2000; 23(5): 545-560.

Affiliation

North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2000, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1006/jado.2000.0342

PMID

11073696

Abstract

Occupational injuries are major adverse outcomes of teen employment in the United States. Using data from a survey of teens employed in three different retail trade settings (food service, grocery, and other retail) in the state of North Carolina, we examine how experience, gender, work setting, and the pace of work are associated with hazard exposures and injury experiences. Multivariate analyses show that, after controlling for individual and job-level variables, perceived work-pace pressure and hazard exposure are positively associated with variation in the types of injury experiences. We emphasize the need to include characteristics of the workplace and the labor process when assessing the adverse consequences of work on adolescent well-being.

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