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      Understanding the health of lorry drivers in context: A critical discourse analysis.

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          Abstract

          This article moves beyond previous attempts to understand health problems in the lives of professional lorry drivers by placing the study of drivers' health in a wider social and cultural context. A combination of methods including focus groups, interviews and observations were used to collect data from a group of 24 lorry drivers working at a large transport company in the United Kingdom. Employing a critical discourse analysis, we identified the dominant discourses and subject positions shaping the formation of drivers' health and lifestyle choices. This analysis was systematically combined with an exploration of the gendered ways in which an almost exclusively male workforce talked about health. Findings revealed that drivers were constituted within a neoliberal economic discourse, which is reflective of the broader social structure, and which partly restricted drivers' opportunities for healthy living. Concurrently, drivers adopted the subject position of 'average man' as a way of defending their personal and masculine status in regards to health and to justify jettisoning approaches to healthy living that were deemed too extreme or irrational in the face of the constraints of their working lives. Suggestions for driver health promotion include refocusing on the social and cultural - rather than individual - underpinnings of driver health issues and a move away from moralistic approaches to health promotion.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Health (London)
          Health (London, England : 1997)
          SAGE Publications
          1461-7196
          1363-4593
          January 2017
          : 21
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Anglia Ruskin University, UK.
          [2 ] Loughborough University, UK.
          [3 ] University of Birmingham, UK.
          [4 ] University of Leicester, UK.
          Article
          1363459316644492
          10.1177/1363459316644492
          27103659
          9f70ea80-1d4b-4f69-bc10-85e64873e51d
          History

          gender and health,discourse analysis,lifestyle
          gender and health, discourse analysis, lifestyle

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