How often have you or your colleagues said, “This job is killing me”?
What you likely didn’t know was that you were right — the workplace is the fifth leading cause of death in the United States! (And the results aren’t much better anywhere else in the world.)
“I want to wake people up. This is a serious issue that has serious consequences for corporate performance and for people’s well-being. We should care about employees’ psychological and physical health, not just about profits,” says Jeffrey Pfeffer, professor of organizational behavior at Stanford Graduate School of Business. “We are harming both company performance and individual well-being, and this needs to be the clarion call for us to stop. There is too much damage being done.”
Pfeffer’s latest book, Dying for a Paycheck, certainly woke me up. It depicts a workplace that has become shockingly inhumane.
The book maps a range of ills in the modern workplace — from layoffs, stress, economic insecurity and the disappearance of good health insurance, to the psychological effects of long hours and work-family conflict — and examines the massive health care toll today’s work culture exacts on employees.
Ironically and tragically, Pfeffer marshals a vast trove of evidence and numerous examples from all over the world to expose the infuriating truth about modern work life – even as organizations allow management practices that hurt employee engagement, increase turnover, and destroy people’s physical and emotional health, those policies don’t enhance productivity or the bottom line, thereby creating a lose-lose situation.
I was struck by a story in the book about Robert Chapman, CEO of Barry-Wehmiller, standing in front of 1,000 other CEOs and saying, “You are the cause of the health care crisis.”
How did Chapman come to this shocking conclusion? The following data points led him to conclude that workplaces are the source of stress (and CEOs “own” what happens in their workplaces); stress causes chronic disease; and chronic disease is the biggest component of our ongoing and huge health expenses”
Not surprisingly, when it comes to our health, the environment we work in is just as important as the one we live in.
Leaders must wake up to the dangers and enormous costs of many of today’s workplaces. They need to make a concerted and sustained effort to reduce the level of stress in the workplace and create environments that are safe, calm and uplifting.
And this effort must venture beyond company wellness programs.
Similar to the efforts to ferret out and eliminate workplace bullying, sexual harassment and gender inequality, stressful and toxic work environments can’t be tolerated any longer. There’s a real danger that to do otherwise could result in lawsuits and public organizational shaming.
Leaders would be wise to take steps now, before the problem becomes more pronounced, and harder and more expensive to resolve.