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Apr 20, 2023
Brenda R. Smyth, Supervisor of Content Creation
A rise in reported employee burnout over the past couple years has turned many organizations’ attention to employee well-being. For 74% of U.S. organizations, employee mental health is a top priority, according to McKinsey Health Institute. But are the efforts to boost morale and manage stress focused on the right things?
Free counseling, yoga apps, childcare and exercise – stress busters and coping skills are increasingly common among the benefits offered by companies today. They’re helpful to individuals in reducing stress, but they don’t address the source of burnout – systemic workplace stressors – and how to combat it.
A closer look at the numbers reveals the extent of stress and burnout in today’s workplaces. Three in five employees reported negative impacts of work-related stress, according to a survey by the American Psychological Association. Gallup 2022 data confirms noting that a third of workers always or very often feel burned-out at work.
The figures vary by industry with the greatest risk being for helping professions or occupations that put workers in frontline roles during the pandemic, e.g., healthcare, transportation, government agencies and non-profits, according to Workday, Inc. Worker shortages and pandemic fallout continue to be occupational hazards for these groups and others.
Learn more when you register for Coping With Workplace Stress, an upcoming live, virtual seminar.
Burnout is a state of emotional, mental and often physical exhaustion characterized by cynicism, low energy or negativism, according to Psychology Today. At work, it “often occurs when a person is not in control of how a job is carried out … or is asked to complete tasks that conflict with their sense of self.” A lack of support, conflict with colleagues, or being permanently overworked, under-challenged or under time pressure can all contribute to burnout.
Now consider many of today’s workplaces. They’re often understaffed leaving workers to tackle heavy loads. Connectivity tools have enabled work to spill over into personal time with some employees being expected to respond at all hours of the day and night. There’s meeting overload and constant pivots to products and services. And, the biggest culprit, toxic behaviors by colleagues, bosses and customers that go unchecked.
Organizations pay a high price when an employee is burned out. Giving your workers tools to deal with stress is helpful to their well-being, but even more important, is preventing unnecessary stress by tackling it at the source.
Brenda R. Smyth
Supervisor of Content Creation
Brenda Smyth is supervisor of content creation at SkillPath. Drawing from 20-plus years of business and management experience, her writings have appeared on Forbes.com, Entrepreneur.com and Training Industry Magazine.
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