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Reducing Employee Stress

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Title: Reducing Employee Stress


1
Reducing Employee Stress
  • rashmidiwan_at_nuepa.org

2
Views on Job-Related Stress
  • Fight or flight response is based on
    classifications made by Dr. Hans Selye regarding
    a persons response to stress
  • Involves three stages
  • Alarm Stage
  • Resistance Stage
  • Exhaustion

3
Stages of Job-Related Stress
  • Alarm Stage muscles tense, respiration rate
    increases, blood pressure and heart rate increase
  • Resisting Stage causes poor decision making and
    physical illness
  • Exhaustion when a person cannot sustain
    resistance indefinitely, and may cause illnesses
    such as ulcers or headaches

4
Views on Job-Related Stress
  • The General Adaptation Syndrome viewpoint
    suggests that people can only take so much stress
    before a serious, debilitating condition results
  • To maximize performance, low levels of stress are
    preferable to stimulate individuals to work
    harder and accomplish more
  • Eustress term for good stress, level of stress
    that is productive

5
Motivation, Efficiency and Stress
Acute Attention, Emotional balance, Rational
thinking
DISTRESS
DISTRESS
Effort
Boredom apathy, Impaired attention
Excitement, disorganized behavior, passivity
EUSTRESS
Motivation
6
Causes of Stress
  • Individual Stressors
  • Interpersonal Stressors
  • Organizational Stressors

7
Individual Stressors
  • Type A personalities
  • impatient, competitive, aggressive, always feel
    like theyre under pressure, do lots of things at
    once, and have a hard time relaxing
  • Type B personalities
  • more mild-mannered, in less of a hurry, and far
    less competitive

8
Individual Stressors
  • Type A people are twice as prone to heart disease
    and fatal heart attacks as type B individuals
  • Type B have better performance records in top
    management positions.
  • Hard for type A to change their behavior and
    adopt a type B style due to the deeply ingrained
    patterns of behavior

9
Individual Stressors
  • Changes in ones life also produce stress, e.g.,
    death of a spouse, or getting fired
  • Demographic attributes individuals with high
    income levels report relatively less stress in
    their lives
  • Job attributes of women and minorities may be
    responsible for higher stress levels

10
Interpersonal Stressors
  • Negative emotion at work employee jealousy and
    employee envy
  • Employee jealousy thoughts, emotions and
    behaviors that result from loss of self-esteem
    and loss of outcomes associated with a working
    relationship

11
Interpersonal Stressors
  • Employee envy thoughts, emotions, and behaviors
    that result from loss of self-esteem in response
    to another individual obtaining outcomes desired
    by self
  • Studies show
  • Males have greater workplace envy
  • Females have greater workplace jealousy
  • Greater jealousy and envy result in lower job
    satisfaction and intentions to quit
  • Envy and jealousy are stress inducers because
    they arise from the perception of threats in the
    work environment

12
Interpersonal Stressors
  • Workplace Romance Positive personal emotions
  • Observers of romantic relationships fear
    favoritism might occur, or charges of sexual
    harassment may occur when it turns sour
  • As more women are in workforce and longer work
    hours occur, the likelihood of workplace romance
    increases

13
Organizational Stressors
  • POLICIES
  • Unfair, inequity in pay, rigid rules and
    ambiguous procedures, frequent transfers
    necessitating relocations
  • STRUCTURES
  • Centralization and formalization, lack of
    involvement in decision making, little
    opportunity for career advancement, high degree
    of specialization, inter departmental conflict,
  • PROCESSES
  • Poor communication, inadequate feedback on
    performance, ambiguous and conflict goals, unfair
    control systems, inadequate information

14
Organizational Stressors
  • Working conditions stressful due to employees
    lack of control and pressures to produce work
    that is not intrinsically rewarding also creates
    stress
  • Emotional labor an occupational mask donned by
    employees who must always display a positive
    demeanor to customers
  • Role conflict when two or more sets of demands
    are made on an employee so that compliance with
    one set of demands makes it more difficult to
    comply with another

15
Organizational Stressors
  • Role ambiguity the absence of clarity regarding
    how to perform ones job
  • Role overload when too many activities are
    expected of an employee, given the time available
    and ability level of employee
  • Shift work 20 of the U.S. workforce, and it
    causes loss of sleep, appetite, depleted social
    interaction, etc.

16
Extra Organizational Stressors
  • Fast pace of social and technological change
  • Economic and financial conditions including
    inflationary pressures
  • Caste system, ethnic identity, minority issues,
  • Family demands and social obligations
  • Relocation and transfers

17
Reactions to Stress
  • Physical problems
  • Ivancevich and Matteson have developed a model
    for estimating the annual costs associated with
    replacing employees lost to heart disease it is
    based on
  • Number of employees
  • Employees in age range of 45 to 65
  • Estimated deaths due to heart disease per year
    .6 of total number of employees

18
Reactions to Stress
  • Estimated premature retirement due to heart
    disease
  • Companys annual personnel losses
  • Annual replacement costs cost of hiring and
    training
  • Alcoholism and drug abuse affects between 6 and
    10 percent of all employees both are linked to
    higher levels of stress

19
Reactions to Stress
  • Absenteeism, turnover, and dissatisfaction are
    correlated with stress levels
  • Workplace violence violence and sabotage may
    result from stress
  • Involves fairly petty expressions of aggressive
    behavior characterized as covert, verbal,
    involving brief displays of intense anger
  • Mass Psychogenic Illness
  • Five common symptoms Headaches, dizziness,
    nausea, abdominal cramps and cough

20
Reactions to Stress
  • Burnout a reaction to prolonged and
    energy-depleting difficulties
  • Primary symptom is feeling drained or used up
  • Typically affects people who are highly
    conscientious and work in helping professions
  • Employees may feel that they are not being
    properly rewarded
  • Frustrations lead to apathy and feelings of
    failure, with physical symptoms of high blood
    pressure, ulcers, mental symptoms such as
    depression

21
Coping with Stress Organizational strategies
  • Creating a supportive organizational
    climate-more towards decentralization, free flow
    of communications and information, participation
    in decision making process, changes in policies
    on performance appraisal, equitable distribution
    of reward, job redesign, role clarity, career
    planning and development

22
Coping with Stress Individual strategies
  • Self control, analyzing consequences of ones
    own behaviour, increasing an individuals control
    over the situations rather than being solely
    controlled by them, networking and building
    social support, counseling

23
Coping with Stress
  • Time management
  • Time logs
  • Structuring time
  • Saying no
  • Making to do lists

24
Thank you
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