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STRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103

S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

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Page 1: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

STRESS IN THE WORKPLACEpy3103

Page 2: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

LEARNING OUTCOMES

At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to

Describe different types and approaches to stress in the workplace

Page 3: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

WHY IS IT IMPORTANT

Stress affects health Increased level of absenteeism due to stress

symptoms (2007-8 15.5 million days lost) Increase in reported levels 528% between

the years 1955-1979 Cost of stress to organisations estimated at

£5 billion a year (10% of Gross National Product)

Page 4: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

What are your experiences of stress in the workplace ?

Page 5: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

WHAT IS JOB STRESS

Original definition was derived from engineering – the force/pressure on a person

A person can take an amount of pressure – but when that pressure becomes to much for an individual it may have serious negative affects

Page 6: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

TYPES OF WORK STRESS

Job content Job overload/under load Job complexity/monotony

Working conditions Dangerous conditions

Employment conditions Shift patterns Low pay Job insecurity

Social relations at work

Page 7: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

STRESS SYMPTOMS

Page 8: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

APPROACHES TO STRESS

Stress can be viewed in 3 ways As a stimulus As a psychological or physiological response Stress as a meditational process

Page 9: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES ON JOB STRESS

Stimulus model General Adaptation Syndrome (Selye)

Stimulus response Cox Cognitive appraisal (Lazarus

Process models The Michigan model The vitamin model The demand-control model

Page 10: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

GENERAL ADAPTATION SYNDROME (GAS (HAN SELYE, 1907-1982)

1) a set of conditions that could be physical or physiological and

2) a set of non-specific biological responses including increase in heart rate, blood pressure and sweating.

Page 11: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

GENERAL ADAPTATION SYNDROME GAS) The alarm stage refers to an organism’s fight-

flight response suggesting that an immediate response to stress was to fight, or flight to safety

Resistance, would then unfold. In the resistance stage, in order to counteract the body’s reaction to alarm which caused depletion in the stores of the adrenal gland, the organism is able to regain some of the store of depleted glands to ensure that the fight for life can continue.

Finally, following continued exposure to stress, Selye suggests, the organism enters the third stage of GAS namely, exhaustion. Here, the last defences are used up and the body is no longer able to continue its fight.

Page 12: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

THE COGNITIVE APPRAISAL MODEL

Lazarus and Folkman (1984) believed that any conceptualisation of stress could not be independent of a person’s appraisal of the situation

It follows that any event may potentially be appraised, and thus experienced, by an individual as stressful, such as moving house, or a visit to the dentist.

Page 13: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

THE MICHIGAN MODEL INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH)

Illness

Page 14: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

THE VITAMIN MODEL (WARR 1987, 1994)

Availability of money

Physical security Valued social

position

Opportunity for control

Opportunity for skill use

Externally generated goals

Variety Environmental clarity Opportunity for

interpersonal contact

Consent effectAdditional decrement

Page 15: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

THE VITAMIN MODEL (WARR 1987, 1994)

The model postulated that low levels of vitamins can lead to poor levels of mental health whilst at the same time, too high a level of vitamins ceases to be beneficial to the individual In other words there is a point when increasing

rewards will no longer render any significant improvements in the mental health of a worker

This was due to a saturation point akin to the process that often occurs within the body’s uptake of vitamins, in that after a certain point there is no benefit from increasing the dose.

Page 16: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

THE DEMAND-CONTROL MODEL (KARASEK, 1979, 1990)

Decision

Latitude

(Control)

Low High

Low

High

Psychological demands

Low strain Active

High strainPassive

Page 17: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

THE DEMAND CONTROL MODEL II

Work stress is an interaction between decision latitude (how much control a worker has over what they are doing and how they do it), and the demands of the job (an individual’s subjective perception of her/his capacities to meet the psychological demands of a task)

Those who are in highly demanding jobs and find themselves in high psychological demand are not without stress even though such individuals may also experience high control. The control allows an individual to develop

protective behaviours and manage stress in an active and more efficient manner

Page 18: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

SOCIAL IDENTITY AND STRESS

Haslam (2004) suggested that the experience of stress in the workplace can be linked to i) the activities of a particular occupation and ii) how that group/occupation is structured and managed, and ii) that group process which may be seen to help reduce stress in the workplace can also be the cause.

Page 19: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

THE ROLE OF SOCIAL SUPPORT

Social support is through to have a stress educing function:-

Social integration Satisfying relationships Perceive available support Actually receive support

Page 20: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

Do some occupations cause more stress than others ?

Page 21: S TRESS IN THE WORKPLACE py3103. L EARNING OUTCOMES At the end of this session and with additional reading you will be able to Describe different types

REFERENCES

Chmiel, N (2000) Introduction to work and organizational psychology: A European perspective, Blackwell