»  Home  »  Business  »  Management  »  All you need to know about work-related stress
All you need to know about work-related stress
 By Carole Spiers | Published  10/11/2005 | Management | Rating:

All you need to know about work-related stress

Synopsis

November 2004’s publication of the Health and Safety Executive’s new Management Standards for work-related stress has focused the minds of many organisations on this increasingly serious workplace hazard. But what are the differences between pressure and stress? What are the telltale signs and symptoms? What’s the current legal position? And what role should managers be playing in helping to combat work-related stress? Leading stress management guru Carole Spiers provides the answers.

 

All you need to know about work-related stress

November 2004’s publication of the Health and Safety Executive’s new Management Standards for work-related stress has focused the minds of many organisations on this increasingly serious workplace hazard. But what are the differences between pressure and stress? What are the telltale signs and symptoms? What’s the current legal position? And what role should managers be playing in helping to combat work-related stress?

 

Pressure or stress?

Many people are confused about what stress is, and in particular the difference between pressure and stress:

·          Pressure is the stimulation and challenge we need to achieve job satisfaction and self-esteem.

·          Stress is a reaction to continued excessive pressure or responsibility when we feel inadequate and unable to cope.

 

Ever since prehistoric times, the ‘stress response’ has been a mechanism that our bodies have used to help us cope with danger. As soon as we’re aware that something is threatening us, our brain sends messages to our nervous system to either get ready to stand and fight, or run away. Unfortunately, whereas in Stone Age times we would usually have time to recover from the life or death encounters that triggered the response, in the modern world we’re confronted with a continuous stream of ‘stressors’ that our bodies perceive as threats, and react to accordingly.

 

Today, these could include financial pressures, fear of redundancy, overwork, deadline pressures or an important business presentation. The constant, ongoing pressure resulting from these stressors is different to the more immediate dangers that our stress response was designed to cope with. And it’s at the point at which our bodies cannot recover from these pressures that we can begin to experience stress.

 

The scale of the problem

According to the latest figures from the HSE:

·          about half a million people in the UK experience work-related stress at a level they believe is making them ill

·          up to 5 million people in the UK feel ‘very’ or ‘extremely’ stressed by their work

·          work-related stress costs society about £3.7 billion every year (1995/6 prices)

 

Telltale signs and symptoms

Depending on the individual, stress can manifest itself in many different ways. The table provides a summary some of the most common physical, psychological and behavioural reactions.

 

Typical Stress Reactions

Physical

Psychological

Behavioural

Palpitations, awareness of heart beating, chest pains

Mood swings

Susceptibility to accidents

Diarrhoea, constipation, flatulence

Panic attacks

Changes in eating habits

Indigestion

Morbid thoughts

Increased smoking

Loss of libido

Low self-esteem

Restlessness, hyperactivity, foot tapping

Muscle tension

Irritability

Over-dependence on drugs and/or alcohol

Menstrual problems

Feeling of helplessness

Changes in sleep patterns

Tiredness

Impatience

Out of character behaviour

Breathlessness

Anxiety

Voluntary withdrawal from supportive relationships

Sweating

Crying

Disregard for personal appearance

Tightness in the chest

Cynicism

Loss of confidence

 

Skin and scalp irritation, eczema and psoriasis

Withdrawal into daydreams

Sullen attitude

Increased susceptibility to allergies

Intrusive thoughts or images

Clenched fists

Frequent colds, flu or other infections

Nightmares

Obsessive mannerisms

Rapid weight gain or loss

Suicidal feelings

Increased absence from work

Backache, neck pain

Paranoid thinking

Aggressiveness

Migraines and tension headaches

Guilt

Poor time management

 

The current legal position

As well as acting as an unnecessary drain on the economy, workplace stress is also the subject of increasing government legislation:

·          Section 2 of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act (1974) lays out the broad principles of an employer’s ‘duty of care’ to ensure, as far as reasonably possible, the health (including mental health), safety and welfare of all employees whilst at work, and to create safe and healthy working systems. This general duty of care includes pre-emptive action to prevent and control work-related stress.

·          Many employers do not realise that since the publication of the Management of Health & Safety at Work Regulations (1999), all organisations with five or more employees have also had a legal duty to conduct regular risk assessments of workplace hazards, including psychosocial hazards such as stress. These assessments should then be used to identify and either avoid or reduce such hazards.

·          On 3 November 2004, the HSE published its new Management Standards for work-related stress - designed to help ensure that organisations address key aspects of workplace stress (or ‘risk factors’) including demands, control, support, relationships, role and change.

·          While the Standards themselves do not impose a legal duty on organisations, breach of the applicable regulations could lead to criminal prosecution, or claims for compensation through the civil courts.

 

So what can managers do?

The Management Standards are all about highlighting potential areas of stress, and encouraging employers to take action to reduce these – with the goal of matching the performance of the top 20% of organisations that are already doing this. If you think your organisation may be experiencing problems due to workplace stress, it will therefore need to take a proactive approach to tackling it:

·          Many organisations face deadline pressures or sudden changes in work demands, and employees need the necessary training and experience to meet the ever-increasing demands made on them. Examples include training in resilience, time management, communication skills, and - for managers in particular - stress awareness enabling them to recognise the early warning signs of stress in themselves and others.

·          Where employees have been forced to take time away from work as a result of stress, their rehabilitation back to work needs to be carefully managed.

·          For those employees who require specialist support, Employee Assistance Programmes and counselling services are a vital component in employee wellbeing.

·          Training in communication (and particularly active listening) skills is essential to help ensure that managers are aware of their team members’ problems and in a position to offer early interventions to resolve these.

 

Ultimately, reducing workplace stress is largely a matter of common sense and good management practice, and simply requires employers and employees to work together for the common good. Both share a joint responsibility for reducing stress – which, when this is successful, can help employees to enjoy their work more, and businesses to thrive as a result.

 

About The Author

Carole Spiers combines three roles of broadcaster, journalist and corporate manager in the challenging field of stress management and employee wellbeing.

 

With 20 years as a top industry guru on stress management and wellbeing, Carole’s energy and dynamism extends to providing professional comment to media including television (BBC, ITV, Sky, NBC, CNN), print (Sunday Times, Daily Telegraph, trade and professional journals) and countless radio interviews.

 

A successful entrepreneur herself, Carole is the founder and MD of the Carole Spiers Group – a dynamic, niche consultancy, and the UK’s No. 1 provider of Stress Management and Employee Wellbeing from the shop floor to the Boardroom

 

A former Chairperson of the International Stress Management AssociationUK, Carole was instrumental in establishing National Stress Awareness Day™. Carole acts as an Expert Witness on Stress Risk Assessment before the Courts, and is the author of Tolley’s ‘Managing Stress in the Workplace’.

 

Free Special Report

 

Contact us to receive our FREE Special report ‘The Ten Most Frequently Asked Questions About Stress’ please email sb@carolespiersgroup.com

 

For more information on CSG’S services, including in-house and public training, stress policy, stress audit, risk assessment, attendance management, rehabilitation support, post trauma support, mediation, impartial investigations, expert witness, nationwide employee counselling team, coaching and mentoring services, please contact us:

 

Carole Spiers Group

International Stress Management & Employee Wellbeing Consultancy

Gordon House, 83-85 Gordon Ave, Stanmore, Middlesex. HA7 3QR. UK

Tel:  +44(0) 20 8954 1593   Fax: +44(0) 20 8907 9290

Email:  info@carolespiersgroup.com  www.carolespiersgroup.com

Article Source: Infonexus.org Free Articles



How would you rate the quality of this article?
1 2 3 4 5
Poor Excellent
Add comment
Comments


Article Options

About the Author
Carole Spiers
Carole Spiers MIHE MISMA Carole Spiers combines three roles of Broadcaster Journalist and Corporate Manager in the challenging field of stress management and employee wellbeing. Over the past 20 years she has built up her corporate stress consultancy Carole Spiers Group (CSG) with prestige clients such as Sainsburys Rolls Royce and the Bank of England. Carole is frequently called upon by the national and international media and provides keynote presentations on stress-related iss 

View all articles by Carole Spiers
Sponsored Links
Submit your site to dozens of search engines for FREE!
Have you heard the buzz? Place free pixel ads on MillionDollarBuzz.com!
Free classifieds on ezClassifieds.org. No registration to post!
Submit your site to our PR4 web directory for FREE!


Google
 
Web Infonexus.org