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Saturday, August 17, 2013


Keeping your employees' nose to the grindstone requires dedicating equal attention to their physical and mental well-being. However, for most employers out there, the need to keep their businesses afloat has led them to overlook this all-too significant aspect. Although it is expected that your employees have to live up to their job descriptions and stay committed to the demands of their positions at all cost, it cannot be discounted that being mere human beings, they too have their individual breaking points. And the risk of implosion brought on by accumulated work issues, which has affected their good state of mental health in one way or another, could not only result to decreased or poor productivity, but also eventual resignations.





Stress on the Job





Upholding and maintaining professionalism necessitates continuous support and a regulated degree of consideration not just on the employee's part, but on their employers' and their bosses' as well. Remember: Your employees' productivity depends on the state of their overall health, both physical and mental/emotional. Although most common physical illnesses plaguing workers can be easily remedied with good medical advice, mental health issues borne of or aggravated by job stress often accumulate and intensify overtime due to neglect.





Technically, job stress refers to the deleterious physical and emotional response resulting from a mismatch between the capability of the worker and his/her job requirements, needs, and/or resources. Job stress can wreak havoc to any worker's physical health and mental disposition. Consequentially, it can promote work-related injuries, accidents, and overall carelessness on the job. Several factors that cause job stress have been identified:



overwork





unrealistic deadlines



job insecurity



isolated working conditions



lack of clear work-related instructions



lack of decision-making



surveillance



inadequate healthcare/child-care provisions





Your Employee's Performance and His/Her Mental Health





Workers enduring too much job stress run the risk of getting ill. Besides physical ailments resulting from a weakened immune system, they are in danger of getting seriously depressed, which has led to certain cases of employees' committing suicide due to work-related issues. To date, job stress is among the most common work-associated health problems, particularly prevalent in developed and developing countries where greater emphasis is placed on the physical aspects of the workplace, while totally ignoring the psychological aspects linked to prevailing working conditions.





Mental health problems directly impact your employees' performance. The adverse consequences are summarized accordingly:





Absenteeism



overall sickness absences, especially frequent short periods of absence



poor health evident in depression, burnout, and stress



physical illnesses such as high blood pressure, heart disease, ulcers, sleeping disorders, skin rashes, headache, neck-and backache, and proneness to infections





Poor work performance



reduced productivity/work output



decreased work proficiency, resulting to increased error rates



increased accident rate



poor decision-making



decreased concern for planning or work outcome



reduced control over one's work





Negative attitudes and behaviors



decline in or loss of motivation and commitment



more hours spent doing less work due to declining concern manifested in lethargy or an absence or lack of focus



increased tardiness





Poor work relationships



increased tension/conflicts between colleagues



increased rate of disciplinary issues



poor relationship with the clients


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