Chronic Health Conditions in the Workplace: Work Stressors and Supportive Supervision, Work Design, and Programs
Public Domain
-
2024/06/01
-
Details
-
Personal Author:
-
Description:A large and growing number of workers are managing chronic physical and mental health conditions while working, necessitating attention from both researchers and leaders and practitioners in organizations. Much of the current discourse around research and practice in this area is focused on prevention of chronic disease and rehabilitation of disability to help workers return to work. Less commonly attended to are workplace factors that can support the quality of working life and the longevity of working life for workers with chronic health conditions. This Special Issue contains a set of interdisciplinary articles examining common stressors for workers with chronic health conditions, including work-health conflict, anticipated stigma, and job insecurity. It also contains articles examining important supportive relational and social and motivational work design factors, including supervisor support, psychosocial safety climate (shared perceptions of work policies, practices, and procedures that are meant to protect worker psychological health and safety), sense of community, organizational fairness, and health-related leeway (freedom available to workers to self-regulate work activities while self-managing day-to-day symptom fluctuations). The focal populations in this set of articles include, broadly, workers with various types of chronic health conditions, and more specifically, workers with mental health conditions, workers with diabetes, and breast cancer survivors. We hope this Special Issue sparks additional interest in these important topics and others that are critical to supporting workers with chronic health conditions in organizations. [Description provided by NIOSH]
-
Subjects:
-
Keywords:
-
ISSN:2367-0134
-
Document Type:
-
Genre:
-
Place as Subject:
-
CIO:
-
Division:
-
Topic:
-
Location:
-
Pages in Document:233-241
-
Volume:8
-
Issue:2
-
NIOSHTIC Number:nn:20069919
-
Citation:Occup Health Sci 2024 Jun; 8(2):233-241
-
Contact Point Address:Alyssa K. McGonagle, Organizational Science Program, Department of Psychological Science, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, 9201 University City Blvd, 28223 Charlotte, NC
-
Email:amcgonag@charlotte.edu
-
Federal Fiscal Year:2024
-
Peer Reviewed:True
-
Source Full Name:Occupational Health Science
-
Collection(s):
-
Main Document Checksum:urn:sha-512:d673240dadbdbd3fa9a57fdbe92537751c66113fe04103ee2206b007cc8c56dd0b25a7082052eae734896f3ca3a78c82679ccd920f6224e7673312cf4da3f861
-
Download URL:
-
File Type:
ON THIS PAGE
CDC STACKS serves as an archival repository of CDC-published products including
scientific findings,
journal articles, guidelines, recommendations, or other public health information authored or
co-authored by CDC or funded partners.
As a repository, CDC STACKS retains documents in their original published format to ensure public access to scientific information.
As a repository, CDC STACKS retains documents in their original published format to ensure public access to scientific information.
You May Also Like