Psychosocial risk is possibly the single biggest cause of occupational ill-health inAustralia, causing up to 30% of cardiovascular disease in working men and up to 30% ofdepression in working women. While the number of studies on effective workplaceinterventions has increased significantly in recent years, there has been at best onlylimited analysis examining the context for these interventions. The literature provideslittle evidence with which to answer critical public policy questions. In order to determine how diverse stakeholders are responding to job stress, this studydirectly sought to characterise this context. Through interviews across industry and withkey stakeholders, this study provides a thorough and empirically grounded description ofcurrent Victorian practice, a critical support for developing a systems approach toworkplace stress. The interviews examined the views of Victorian stakeholders in thearea of job stress to investigate understanding of and receptivity to systems approaches and reviewed experiences in workplaces. The picture that emerges from the interview data is contrasting, but with common features across groups. Most parties understood stress as an individual health issue, even though the links to the wider workplace environment were recognised by many. The views of some interviewees imply moral judgements about acceptable stress, experienced by “good” people who deal with trauma and conflict in their work, and unacceptable stress, experienced by “bad” people who can’t cope with the ups and downs of working life. Even so, the need to deal with job stress is recognised by all.
History
Pagination
1-9
Location
Sydney, New South Wales
Open access
Yes
Start date
2006-11-20
End date
2006-11-22
Language
eng
Publication classification
E1.1 Full written paper - refereed
Copyright notice
2006, Human Factors and Ergonomics Society of Australia
Title of proceedings
HFESA 2006 : Proceedings of the 42nd annual conference of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society of Australia
Event
Human Factors and Ergonomics Society of Australia. Conference (42nd : 2006 : Sydney, New South Wales)