3 research outputs found
The Australian workplace barometer: report on psychosocial safety climate and worker health in Australia
The Australian Workplace Barometer project aims to provide science driven evidence of Australian work conditions and their relationships to workplace health and productivity, through a national monitoring and surveillance system.
This report was commissioned by Safe Work Australia to provide a summary of the results from data obtained from six Australian states and territories: New South Wales, South Australia, Western Australia, Tasmania, the Australian Capital Territory and the Northern Territory. The data provides evidence relating to psychosocial risk factors in the working Australian population as well as an analysis of relationships between risk factors and employee health and motivational outcomes
Depression in the workplace : an economic cost analysis of depression-related productivity loss attributable to job strain and bullying
Depression represents an increasing global health epidemic with profound effects in the workplace. Building a business case via the quantification of potentially avertable costs is essential to convince organizations to address depression at work. Our study objectives were to: (1) demonstrate a process path whereby job strain and bullying are related to productivity loss via their effects on depression; (2) estimate the costs to employers of sickness absence and presenteeism that are associated with depression; (3) investigate the relationship between depression severity and costs; and (4) estimate the contribution of job strain and bullying to depression-related productivity loss. A populationbased telephone survey was conducted across two Australian states (N = 2074), with a one-year follow-up (cohort design). Results confirmed job strain and bullying affected productivity via depressive symptoms. Total national annual employer costs for lost productivity due to depression were estimated at AUD693 million in preventable lost productivity costs per annum. Findings suggest that even sub-clinical levels of depression represent a significant productivity and economic burden not previously recognized.