Stress and work-life balance
The number of stress-related disability claims by American employees has
doubled according to the Employee Assistance Professionals Association in
Arlington, Virginia. Seventy-five to ninety percent of physician visits are
related to stress and, according to the American Institute of Stress, the cost
to industry has been estimated at $200 billion-$300 billion a year.
Steven L. Sauter, chief of the Applied Psychology and Ergonomics Branch of
the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health in Cincinnati, Ohio, states that recent studies show that "the
workplace has become the single greatest source of stress". Michael
Feuerstein, professor of clinical psychology at the Uniformed Services
University of the Health Sciences at Bethesda Naval Hospital states,
"We're seeing a greater increase in work-related neuroskeletal disorders
from a combination of stress and ergonomic stressors".
It is clear that problems caused by stress have become a major concern to
both employers and employees. Symptoms of stress are manifested both
physiologically and psychologically. Persistent stress can result in cardiovascular
disease, sexual health problems, a weaker immune system and frequent headaches, stiff muscles, or backache. It can also
result in poor coping skills, irritability, jumpiness, insecurity, exhaustion, and difficulty
concentrating. Stress may also perpetuate or lead to binge eating, smoking, and alcohol consumption.
According to James Campbell Quick, a professor of organizational behavior
at the University of Texas-Arlington, "The average tenure of presidents at
land-grant universities in the past ten years has dropped from approximately
seven to three-and-a-half years".
The feeling that simply working hard is not enough anymore is acknowledged
by many other American workers. "To get ahead, a seventy-hour work week is
the new standard. What little time is left is often divvied up among
relationships, kids, and sleep." This increase in work hours
over the past two decades means that less time will be spent with family,
friends, and community as well as pursuing activities that one enjoys and
taking the time to grow personally and spiritually.
Texas Quick, an expert witness at trials of companies who were accused of
overworking their employees, states that "when people get worked beyond
their capacity, companies pay the price." Although some
employers believe that workers should reduce their own stress by simplifying their lives and making a better effort to care for their health, most experts
feel that the chief responsibility for reducing stress should be management.
According to Esther M. Orioli, president of Essi Systems, a stress
management consulting firm, "Traditional stress-management programs placed
the responsibility of reducing stress on the individual rather than on the
organization-where it belongs. No matter how healthy individual employees are
when they start out, if they work in a dysfunctional system, they’ll burn
out."