Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Cameron Mustard is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Cameron Mustard.


Journal of Occupational Health Psychology | 2000

Gender Differences in Job Strain, Social Support at Work, and Psychological Distress

Marian Vermeulen; Cameron Mustard

Using the demand-control-support model of job strain, the authors examined gender differences in the relationship between psychosocial work exposures and psychological distress in a cross-sectional sample of 7,484 employed Canadians. Compared with low-strain work, high-strain and active work were associated with a significantly higher level of distress in both men and women. Differences in psychological distress in relation to psychosocial work exposures were greater for men than for women. Low social support was associated with higher distress across all categories of job strain, and the combined effect of low social support and high job strain was associated with the greatest increase in distress. This pattern was similar in men and women. This study suggests that psychosocial work exposures may be a more significant determinant of psychological well-being in male workers compared with female workers.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 2006

Socioeconomic Status and Mortality after Acute Myocardial Infarction

David A. Alter; Alice Chong; Peter C. Austin; Cameron Mustard; Karey Iron; Jack I. Williams; Christopher D. Morgan; Jack V. Tu; Jane Irvine; C. David Naylor

Context Many studies show worse cardiovascular outcomes among poor persons than among affluent persons, but the factors that mediate this relationship are unknown. Contribution In this prospective study of 3407 Canadians who were hospitalized for myocardial infarction, 7.1% of the patients in the high-income group died within 2 years compared with 15.3% of the patients in the low-income group. Adjustment for age, preexisting cardiovascular disease, and risk factors greatly attenuated the relationship between mortality rates and income. Adjustment for other factors had little effect. Implications A history of 1 or more cardiovascular events and worse cardiovascular risk factors may explain why poor people have worse outcomes than affluent people after myocardial infarction. The Editors For many decades (1, 2) and across multiple nations (3-6), differences in socioeconomic status have been consistently associated with variations in cardiovascular disease and mortality rates (6, 7). This wealthhealth gradient (8) is independent of the socioeconomic indicator used (9), persists even after such cardiovascular events as acute myocardial infarction (MI) (10), and has been observed in countries with publicly funded universal health care (10-13). The causes of these incomeoutcome gradients are debatable (14-17). Poorer patients are more likely to smoke or have diabetes and hypertension, all of which lead to accelerated atherosclerosis and higher subsequent mortality rates (18, 19). However, incomeoutcome gradients persist after adjustment for cardiovascular events and traditional cardiac risk factors. These residual effects of income or education have led to speculation about differences in behaviors after MI, psychosocial stressors, and variations in access to medical care (10, 20-24). Although the mechanisms whereby psychosocial factors affect cardiovascular health are still incompletely delineated, ordinary risk factors (such as cigarette use) and health service intensity are potentially modifiable among the poor and those with less education. Therefore, our study focused on delineating the extent to which the association between socioeconomic factors and increased mortality rates can be explained by traditional risk factors and variations in service use. We hypothesized that cardiovascular risk factors remain the central intermediary pathway by which socioeconomic status is linked to increased mortality rates. We tested this hypothesis by using a cohort of patients who were hospitalized after an acute MI. By evaluating medium- term all-cause mortality in this sample, we increased the likelihood that death would be the result of a vascular event and reduced the risk for confounding by other causes of death (25). We aggregated traditional risk factors with previous vascular disease to obtain a powerful proxy for cumulative atherosclerotic burden, thereby enabling us to focus on assessing the incremental prognostic effect of socioeconomic status. Methods Data Source We obtained data from the Socio-Economic and Acute Myocardial Infarction (SESAMI) study, a prospective observational study of patients who were hospitalized because of acute MI throughout Ontario, Canada (19, 24). Of these data, we included a 13-item patient-completed questionnaire that addressed risk factors for atherosclerosis and socioeconomic status. By using encrypted health card numbers, we linked survey data to administrative databases for additional clinical information. We tracked each patients hospitalization history by using computerized abstracts that were assembled by the Canadian Institute for Health Information from 1 April 1988 to the date of the patients admission for the index event. We ascertained the number and types of cardiac procedures performed during and following the index admission by using the institutes data and physician billing claims from the Ontario Health Insurance Plan databases (10, 24). Procedure use reported in administrative databases was compared with patient self-reports; agreement levels ranged from 74% (coronary angiography) to 98% (coronary artery bypass surgery) and were similar across socioeconomic strata (24). We calculated patient deaths by acquiring data from the Ontario Registered Persons Data Base. Study Sample The SESAMI investigators recruited English-speaking patients who were admitted through the emergency departments in 53 of 57 large-volume (defined as having 100 or more patient admissions for MI per year) Ontario hospitals between 1 December 1999 and 26 February 2003. Trained nurses identified eligible patients through chart surveillance while patients were hospitalized in coronary or intensive care units. The diagnosis of MI was confirmed if at least 2 of 3 criteria were met: presence of symptoms, abnormal electrocardiographic findings, or elevated serum levels of cardiac enzymes. Of all eligible patients, 96% had acute MI confirmed by chart audits (19). We excluded patients younger than 19 years of age or older than 101 years of age, those lacking a valid health card number issued by the province of Ontario, and those who were transferred to the recruiting hospital. To be eligible, patients were required to complete a self-administered baseline survey at study entry. This requirement rendered ineligible those dying within 24 hours, those who had very severe illness (for example, patients receiving mechanical ventilation), those who had language barriers, or those undergoing early discharge or transfer (19, 24). Among 4668 consecutive eligible patients approached for consent, 3504 agreed to participate in baseline surveys and subsequent data linkage. For purposes of this study, 97 patients could not be linked to administrative data because of invalid or inaccurately documented health card numbers; 3407 patients remained available for participation. Socioeconomic Status, Ethnicity, and Demographic Factors We assessed self-reported household annual income (from all sources) as a 7-level categorical variable ranging from less than


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2011

Employment status is associated with both physical and mental health quality of life in people living with HIV

Sergio Rueda; Janet Raboud; Cameron Mustard; Ahmed M. Bayoumi; John N. Lavis; Sean B. Rourke

15000 to greater than


BMC Public Health | 2003

A comparison between the effort-reward imbalance and demand control models

Aleck Ostry; Shona Kelly; Paul A. Demers; Cameron Mustard; Clyde Hertzman

80000 Canadian. Self-reported educational attainment was analyzed as a 5-level categorical variable ranging from an incomplete high school education to a university degree. Income and education levels were self-reported by 92% and 98% of participants, respectively. To mitigate the confounding effect of retirement from the labor force, the cohort was stratified into persons younger than 65 years of age and those 65 years of age and older (12, 26). To ensure similar sample sizes across socioeconomic subgroups, we reaggregated income categories into a 3-level ordinal variable for each age group. For the younger age group, income categories were less than


Journal of Occupational Health Psychology | 2006

Examining the relationship between work-family spillover and sleep quality.

Alysha Williams; Renée-Louise Franche; Selahadin Ibrahim; Cameron Mustard; Francine Roussy Layton

30000,


Ethnicity & Health | 2010

The prevalence of over-qualification and its association with health status among occupationally active new immigrants to Canada

Cynthia Chen; Peter Smith; Cameron Mustard

30000 to


Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health | 2009

Trends in educational inequalities in smoking and physical activity in Canada: 1974-2005.

Peter Smith; John Frank; Cameron Mustard

59999, and at least


Journal of Occupational Rehabilitation | 2006

Early Healthcare Provider Communication with Patients and Their Workplace Following a Lost-time Claim for an Occupational Musculoskeletal Injury

Agnieszka Kosny; Renée-Louise Franche; Jason D. Pole; Niklas Krause; Pierre Côté; Cameron Mustard

60000 Canadian; for the older age group, the categories were less than


Psychosomatic Medicine | 2008

Do changes in job control predict differences in health status?: Results from a longitudinal national survey of Canadians

Peter Smith; John Frank; Susan J. Bondy; Cameron Mustard

20000,


Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health | 2008

Examining the relationships between job control and health status: a path analysis approach

Paul Smith; John Frank; Cameron Mustard; Susan J. Bondy

20000 to

Collaboration


Dive into the Cameron Mustard's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jacob Etches

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Benjamin C. Amick

Florida International University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Douglas G. Manuel

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge