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Advanced Human Resource Management: Managing Workplace Health

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March 28th and March 30th alternate class sessions. OHS ... Spitting. Mobbing. Bullying. Intimidation. Threats. Ostracism. Ignoring. Rude Gestures. Yelling ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Advanced Human Resource Management: Managing Workplace Health


1
Advanced Human Resource Management Managing
Workplace Health Safety
  • Tuesday March 7, 2006

2
Agenda
  • March 28th and March 30th alternate class
    sessions
  • OHS
  • Chapter 2 The Legal Context for HRM (pp. 54-64)
  • OSHA. Add value. To your business. To your
    workplace. To your life. (Fall 2002). Job Safety
    Health Quarterly, 14 (1)
  • Pearson, C.M., Andersson, L.M., Porath, C.L.
    (2000). Assessing and attacking workplace
    incivility. Organizational Dynamics, 29, 123-137.
  • Hantula, D.A., Hilbert, S.M. (1997). Safety
    isnt simple. Academy of Management Executive,
    11, 82-83.
  • Nelson, D.L. Burke, R.J. (2000). Women
    executives Health, stress, and success. Academy
    of Management Executive, 14, 107-121.

3
Occupational Health Safety
  • The identification, evaluation, and control of
    hazards associated with the work environment
  • Standards to ensure safe and healthy working
    conditions and provide penalties for violators
    (e.g., OSHA)
  • Based on
  • OSHA (Add value. To your business. To your
    workplace. To your life.), and the film Death on
    the Job,
  • Consider the following
  • Identify some of the discrepancies between what
    OSHA purports to do, and what happens in the real
    world. Why might these discrepancies exist?
  • What might help to rectify and/or avoid such
    problems?
  • Why do you think that we so rarely hear about
    workplace fatalities and other major accidents?

4
Occupational Health Safety
  • Employees and employees share responsibility for
    creating and maintaining safe and healthy work
    environments
  • Safety injury
  • Damage, wound to body, accidents, aggression,
    etc.
  • Health illness
  • Condition, disorder caused by exposure, rsi, etc.
  • What are the 3 key messages from Hantula
    Hilbert (1997) Safety isnt simple?

5
Societal Expectations
  • To some extent, every society has precisely the
    accident rate it is willing to accept
  • Societal norms about seat-belt use or smoking
    changed not that long ago collective will can
    be a powerful force for change

6
Managerial Perspective Challenges
  • Managers must deal with a variety of workplace
    safety issues including
  • Protecting the public
  • Providing a safe and healthy work environment
  • Comply with specific legal requirements
  • Challenges
  • Extent of employers responsibility to maintain a
    safe and healthy work environment
  • Understanding the reasons for safety and health
    laws and the costs and obligations they impose on
    employers
  • Developing an awareness of contemporary health
    and safety issues, including SARS, AIDS, violence
    against employees, stress, workplace smoking,
    repetitive strain injuries, substance abuse,
    hazardous chemicals.
  • Describing the features of safety programs and
    understand the reasons for, and the effects of
    programs designed to enhance employee welfare

7
Workplace Safety and the Law
  • Legislation has 2 specific aims
  • Concern with the injured work (Workers
    Compensation)
  • Provide prompt medical care
  • Provide income to victims and their dependants
  • Provide a no-fault system
  • Encourage employees to invest in safety
  • Promote research on workplace safety
  • Laws to reduce workplace injuries and illnesses
  • All Canadian jurisdiction make provisions for 2
    kinds of shared responsibility activities
  • Health and safety committees
  • The right to refuse unsafe work

8
Right to Refuse Work
  • In general, the right to refuse work does not
    depend on the workers ability to prove that a
    hazard exists the standard that applies is
    having reason to believe that the situation is
    unsafe

9
Question
  • Maintaining health and safety on the job is a
    management function as much as a legal and
    ergonomic function, yet often, managers fail when
    it comes to their daily duties. What can
    management do?

10
High quality work and injuriesData from
Barling, Kelloway and Iverson
  • Focused on high quality work gt15,000 employees
  • A high quality job is one which provides the
    employee with the means and the opportunity for
    doing great work
  • High quality work comprised three different
    aspects
  • extensive training
  • job rotation
  • autonomy
  • Found a direct relationship with injuries

11
Dupont Canada Safety Philosophy
  • We are committed to excellence in safety and
    occupational health for all people on and off the
    job
  • We are committed to the safe distribution and use
    of our products by our customers
  • Safety management is an integral part of our
    business and it built on the belief that all
    injuries and occupational illnesses are
    preventable that we are all responsible for our
    own safety and also that of our fellow employees
    and that managers are responsible for the safety
    of those in their organizations

12
Outcome of an unhealthy work environment Stress
  • A Meaningless Term?
  • I may not know what it is, but I sure know that
    Ive got it!
  • A psychological reaction to the demands inherent
    in a stressor that has the potential to make a
    person feel tense or anxious

13
What is Stress?
  • Reactions to events
  • Not being sure of what is expected in a situation
  • Feeling anxious or uptight
  • Feeling pressured
  • Worrying about the future
  • Perceived causes of feelings
  • Fighting traffic
  • Having too much to do ( too little time to do
    it)
  • Trying to balance work family responsibilities
  • Dealing with difficult people at work

14
Stress
  • Usually defined in terms of a situation that
    creates excessive psychological or physiological
    demands on a person
  • The situation is referred to as a stressor
  • Environmental events or conditions that have the
    potential to induce stress
  • Stressors at Work Diversity, Work/Life Conflict,
    Sexual Harassment, Job Insecurity, Monotony, Lack
    of Control, Interpersonal Stressors, Change
  • The outcome is strain
  • Physiological, Psychological, Behavioural,
    Organizational Symptoms
  • Stress is the individuals subjective experience
    of the stressor

STRESSOR
STRESS
STRAIN
15
Work Stress Prevalence and Costs
  • 15 experience daily work stress on any given
    day
  • Costs of stress are undoubtedly tremendous
  • work absenteeism, accidents, productivity
  • social health, depression, self-esteem
  • 25 of white-collar workers and 40 of
    blue-collar workers had a stress-related absence
    in 1998
  • In the US the cost of stress has been calculated
    at 350 billion per year
  • Stress levels in Canada nearly double the rate
    reported a decade ago
  • One-fourth of employees view their jobs as the
    number one stressor in their lives. Northwestern
    National Life
  • Three-fourths of employees believe employees have
    more on-the-job stress than a generation ago.
    Princeton Survey Research Associates

16
Stress Prevention Job Performance
  • St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company
    conducted studies on the effects of stress
    prevention programs in hospital settings
  • Program activities included (1) employee and
    management education on job stress, (2) changes
    in hospital policies and procedures to reduce
    organizational sources of stress, and (3)
    establishment of employee assistance programs
  • The frequency of medication errors declined by
    50 after prevention activities were implemented
    in a 700-bed hospital
  • There was a 70 reduction in malpractice claims
    in 22 hospitals that implemented stress
    prevention activities
  • There was no reduction in claims in a matched
    group of 22 hospitals that did not implement
    stress prevention activities

17
Women executives Health, stress, and
successNelson Burke (2000)
  • Diversity increasing need to understand impact
    of stress on different groups of employees
  • Stressors related to women
  • Barriers to achievement, Tokenism, Overload,
    Downsizing, Expectations, Relationships,
    Politics, Social-sexual behaviour, Work-home
    conflict, Workaholism
  • Prevention
  • Primary, secondary, tertiary organizational and
    individual mechanisms

18
A cause of and reaction to stress workplace
aggression
  • Workplace aggression All individual behavior
    aimed at harming others in and around a place of
    work (Neuman Baron, 1997).
  • Key to this type of counterproductive work
    behavior is that it is interpersonal in nature,
    and there is an intent to harm on the part of the
    perpetrator.
  • National statistics suggest that workplace
    aggression is on the rise. These findings are
    based on numbers of grievances filed over time.
  • 64 of Canadian workers perceive that their
    workplace is not as safe from aggressive persons
    as it once was.

19
Workplace aggression can include
  • Homicide
  • Robbery
  • Wounding
  • Kicking
  • Biting
  • Spitting
  • Mobbing
  • Bullying
  • Intimidation
  • Threats
  • Ostracism
  • Ignoring
  • Rude Gestures
  • Yelling
  • Insulting
  • Incivility
  • Gossiping
  • Sexual Harassment
  • Discrimination
  • Terrorism

20
Statistics and trends in workplace aggression
  • United States
  • Homicide is one of the leading causes of death on
    the job
  • Estimated that approximately 1000 workers are
    murdered on the job each year (Bureau of Labour
    and Statistics, 2000)
  • Nearly 1.5 million people endure non-fatal
    assaults each year, including acts of harassment,
    intimidation, and physical attacks (over 5500
    incidents daily). This averages out to one in
    every 68 workers (based on a workforce of 135
    million NIOSH, 1996)
  • Canada
  • Data suggests that while workers in Canada are
    less likely to be murdered on the job than
    workers in the US, workers in Canada are more
    likely to be the victim of a non-fatal assault
    (International Labor Organization, 1998).
  • These statistics have suggested that 4-5 of
    workers have been assaulted over the last year at
    work (ILO, 1998).
  • 80 of nurses in Nova Scotia have reported being
    the victim of violence at work over their careers
    (Nova Scotia Department of Labour, 2003).

21
Risk factors and Antecedents
  • Risk Factors
  • People who work late shifts, carry money, deal
    with the public, work alone, in a position to
    deny a request or service, on the front lines,
  • Places that are easy to access/have limited
    security.
  • May occur when consumer is dissatisfied with
    service.
  • Workplace Conditions
  • Perceptions of injustice
  • Over-controlling and/or abusive supervisors
  • Sanctions
  • Previous acts of lower-level aggression
  • Aggressive Culture
  • Individual Factors
  • Trait anger, Negative affectivity, Attitudes
    toward revenge, History of aggression,
    Alcohol/drug abuse

22
Outcomes
  • Individual Outcomes
  • Direct and vicarious targets
  • Diminished psychological well-being and physical
    well-being.
  • Organizational
  • Decrease in employee productivity due to 1
    diminished functioning of affected employees, and
    2 blaming organization for the aggression and
    wanting to retaliate.
  • Withdrawal behavior (absenteeism turnover).
    Estimated that in the US, people are absent an
    average of 3.5 days of work for every incident of
    workplace aggression ( 55 million dollars in
    lost wages annually doesnt include people who
    are vicariously exposed).
  • Health care/counseling costs, Compensation/Legal
    costs, Negative publicity/reputation.
  • Any positive outcomes?

23
What can organizations do?
  • Screening applicants (?)
  • Straightforward performance reward criteria to
    clarify expectations and reduce the potentially
    aggressive employee's ability to 'blame' the
    system or supervisor for failures
  • Training employees about what kind of behavior
    is/ is not appropriate Training about
    organizational policies against aggression
  • Zero-Tolerance Policies to provide employees with
    guidelines of acceptable behavior and conduct
  • Improved channels for expressing grievances
  • A formal disciplinary process ensures that all
    employees are treated fairly and with respect and
    dignity, especially in the case of terminations
  • Assessing risk. Identify problem areas (e.g.,
    sectors where layoffs are common or imminent,
    locations that are difficult to secure), problem
    people (e.g., employees with a history of
    reprimands, suspensions), and problem jobs (e.g.,
    jobs that include a high degree of contact with
    the public, low supervision, and access to
    weapons)

24
Wellness at Work
  • New interest in workplace wellness
  • Research in North America and elsewhere
  • Major psychological and behavioral journals
    devoted to the topic
  • Becomes even more critical during turbulent
    times, both for employees and organizations
  • Little changes do make a big difference in the
    long term
  • Wellness programs
  • Focus on preventing health problems
  • Helps to identify potential health risks
  • It educates employees about health risks
  • It encourages employees to change their
    lifestyles

25
Elements of a Healthy Workplace
Work roles (clarity, no ambiguity)
Work schedule
Workload and pace
Job security/ future
Reduced Status distinctions
Healthy and Productive Work
Social environment
Extrinsic factors
Commitment and trust
Workplace monitoring
Control at work
Workplace justice
26
Toward Healthy and Productive Work Some
Concluding Thoughts
  • Becomes even more critical in turbulent times,
    both for employees and organizations
  • Large organizational and job changes are
    unnecessary, and perhaps counterproductive given
    social and economic changes
  • Given these changes, enhancing employee
    perceptions of control is critical
  • Little changes do make a big difference in the
    long term
  • It is easier, and more effective, to focus on
    jobs than people
  • Despite major social and economic changes, it is
    possible to move toward healthy and productive
    work
  • Little changes make a big difference over the
    long term

27
Next Class
  • Next Class Performance Management
  • Text Chapter 7 Managing Employees Performance
  • Reserve (1) Silverman, S. B., Pogson, C. E.,
    Cober, A. B. (2005). When employees at work dont
    get it A model for enhancing individual employee
    change in response to performance feedback.
    Academy of Management Executive, 29, 135-147.
  • (2) Cannon, M.D., Witherspoon, R. (2005).
    Actionable feedback Unlocking the power of
    learning and performance improvement. Academy of
    Management Executive, 19, 120-134.
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