Posts Tagged demand control

Workplace Stress Is Not in Your Mind

Last year, I ran a series of blog posts about stress. I appreciate the opportunity to share with readers the “demand control” model of stress, which is embraced by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, but in the US has fallen on deaf ears. Too often, employers’ only solution to employee stress is to provide simplistic behavioral programs. While these programs have value, they overstate the role of individual control over stress, and they substantially understate — in fact, ignore — the fact that the workplace itself is at the root of most employee stress.

Here’s an infographic — courtesy of the innovative folks at Visual Loop and Infographic World — that depicts Read the rest of this entry »

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Stress at Work: Does Your Job Make You Sick?

The December CoHealth TweetChat generated a lively discussion about workplace stress (read a recap here). Some participants -notably, Dr. David Ballard from the American Psychological Association - cited the impact organizational structure and job design have on employee stress. For those interested in learning more about this model, we’ve posted the following excerpt from Bob Merberg’s The Health Seeker’s Handbook (Well Lit Books, 2003). In future posts, we’ll provide additional resources related to this essential concept in employee stress.

The primary reason that worksite wellness programs in the United States have failed to live up to their original promise — building a healthier, more productive workforce and reduced health care costs — is because these programs have focused on individual health behaviors with total disregard for the maladies and health-risks that are intrinsic to the organization itself. CEOs can be sold on the idea that their employees’ behaviors must change, but they refuse to assess the manner in which they treat those employees.

Over the last 30 years, a strong body of scientific evidence has emerged supporting the idea that employee health is driven largely by Read the rest of this entry »

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