Health inequalities continue to grow despite continuous policy intervention. Work,
one domain of health inequalities, is often included as a component of social class
rather than as a determinant in its own right. Many social class classifications are
derived from occupation types, but there are other components within them that mean
they may not be useful as proxies for occupation. This paper develops the exposome,
a life-course exposure model developed by Wild (2005), into the worksome, allowing
for the explicit consideration of both physical and psychosocial exposures and effects
derived from work and working conditions. The interactions between and within temporal
and geographical scales are strongly emphasised, and the interwoven nature of both
psychosocial and physical exposures is highlighted. Individuals within an occupational
type can be both affected by and effect upon occupation level characteristics and
health measures. By using the worksome, occupation types are separated from value-laden
social classifications. This paper will empirically examine whether occupation better
predicts health measures from the European Working Conditions Survey (EWCS). Logistic
regression models using Bayesian MCMC estimation were run for each classification
system, for each health measure. Health measures included, for example, whether the
respondent felt their work affected their health, their self-rated health, pain in
upper or lower limbs, and headaches. Using the Deviance Information Criterion (DIC),
a measure of predictive accuracy penalised for model complexity, the models were assessed
against one another. The DIC shows empirically which classification system is most
suitable for use in modelling. The 2-digit International Standard Classification of
Occupations showed the best predictive accuracy for all measures. Therefore, examining
the relationship between health and work should be done with classifications specific
to occupation or industry rather than socio-economic class classifications. This justifies
the worksome, allowing for a conceptual framework to link many forms of work-health
research.