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Helping Employees Overcome Workplace StressPublished June 7, 2005
Today's high stress workplaces not only affect employees' quality of work on the job — typically, work performance suffers when employees feel overwhelmed — but also their quality of life outside of work. When employees feel stressed out about their jobs, it spills over into their home lives and has a negative impact on their families, friends, community projects, etc. To make matters worse, workplace stress also has an adverse impact on employee health. Research conducted by the Stockholm Heart Epidemiology Programme (Sweden) concluded that employees on a tight deadline at work are six times more likely to suffer from a heart attack during the next 24 hours. As a matter of fact, 8% of the people who took part in the study and had had a heart attack said they had experienced a stressful event at work within 24 hours prior to their attack. The study also revealed that if a man is given increased responsibilities at work, his heart attack risk can go up six fold, while a woman's can increase three fold. In today's 24/7 work culture, it's no wonder that workplace stress can increase a person's risk of heart attack. Stress is the body's response to any demand made on it. As the body responds to various forms of physical or emotional stress, certain predictable changes take place, such as increased heart rate, blood pressure, and secretions of hormones. Continual exposure lowers the body's ability to cope with additional forms of physical and mental stress and can eventually lead to a heart attack or other health problems. So if employees feel so stressed out, why don't they do something about it? Employees gave a number of reasons as to why they remain stressed on the job.
Stress BustersHere are some steps you can take to help defuse employees' stress in your workplace.
Related Topic(s): Safety & Health |
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