ฉันรักแปลMen’s ageing bodies
An important aspect of promoting effective workplace
health interventions is to consider the differences in work
trajectories and life circumstances in structuring the differences
in health beliefs and health behaviours between
social classes [43,44]. When planning workplace interventions
with older men, occupational health and health
promotion practitioners may wish to consider how men in
different occupational groups view growing older, and
how much their work experiences influence the pursuit
of activities to improve their health. The connection between
living and working conditions can shape health beliefs
and expectations of health in later life, with those in
manual jobs being more readily accepting of a decline in
their bodies and an inevitable loss of functioning related
to manual work. Feelings of bodily decline through ageing,
and uselessness in work life, may be something that
unconsciously affects health-seeking behaviours. In contrast,
professional workers may disguise many of the effects
of ageing, seeking out ways to improve their
ageing bodies rather than see them in decline