Organizational options for preventing work-related stress in knowledge work

Publication: Research - peer-reviewJournal article – Annual report year: 2012

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Organizational options for preventing work-related stress in knowledge work. / Ipsen, Christine; Jensen, Per Langaa.

In: International Journal of Industrial Ergonomics, Vol. 42, No. 4, 2012, p. 325-334.

Publication: Research - peer-reviewJournal article – Annual report year: 2012

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Author

Ipsen, Christine; Jensen, Per Langaa / Organizational options for preventing work-related stress in knowledge work.

In: International Journal of Industrial Ergonomics, Vol. 42, No. 4, 2012, p. 325-334.

Publication: Research - peer-reviewJournal article – Annual report year: 2012

Bibtex

@article{71427c484a0948f983032225f7280699,
title = "Organizational options for preventing work-related stress in knowledge work",
publisher = "Elsevier BV",
author = "Christine Ipsen and Jensen, {Per Langaa}",
year = "2012",
volume = "42",
number = "4",
pages = "325--334",
journal = "International Journal of Industrial Ergonomics",
issn = "0169-8141",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Organizational options for preventing work-related stress in knowledge work

A1 - Ipsen,Christine

A1 - Jensen,Per Langaa

AU - Ipsen,Christine

AU - Jensen,Per Langaa

PB - Elsevier BV

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - Recent studies point to work-related stress as an increasing problem for knowledge workers. However, the working life in knowledge-intensive companies is often described as good and stimulating. The aim of this study is to explore the organizational options for preventing work-related problems in knowledge work. This calls for a study of the characteristics of knowledge work, stress management interventions and an in-depth analysis of the organizational factors causing frustrations and work-related problems in relation to knowledge work. In a qualitative study, 27 respondents were interviewed. They represented different stakeholders in five Danish knowledge-intensive companies, which comprised two consultancies and three engineering consulting companies.<br/><br/>The study shows that knowledge work comprises a paradox, since the same work-related or organizational issues could be experienced as both an opportunity and a source of stress. The stress interventions applied are short-term and focus on the individual; consequently, they affect long-term prevention, which focuses on changing the organizational and managerial circumstances. Finally, the in-depth analysis shows that the organizational factors in the organizational design are not aligned, which consequently has an unsolicited effect on both daily activities and the human factors.<br/><br/>The findings suggest that if the central components in the organizational design were aligned, the benefits could include reduced absenteeism and turnover as well as higher productivity. Relevance to industry: The paper identifies organizational options on which managers, employees and ergonomists can focus when initiating new stress management practices and preventive changes aimed at redesigning knowledge work. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

AB - Recent studies point to work-related stress as an increasing problem for knowledge workers. However, the working life in knowledge-intensive companies is often described as good and stimulating. The aim of this study is to explore the organizational options for preventing work-related problems in knowledge work. This calls for a study of the characteristics of knowledge work, stress management interventions and an in-depth analysis of the organizational factors causing frustrations and work-related problems in relation to knowledge work. In a qualitative study, 27 respondents were interviewed. They represented different stakeholders in five Danish knowledge-intensive companies, which comprised two consultancies and three engineering consulting companies.<br/><br/>The study shows that knowledge work comprises a paradox, since the same work-related or organizational issues could be experienced as both an opportunity and a source of stress. The stress interventions applied are short-term and focus on the individual; consequently, they affect long-term prevention, which focuses on changing the organizational and managerial circumstances. Finally, the in-depth analysis shows that the organizational factors in the organizational design are not aligned, which consequently has an unsolicited effect on both daily activities and the human factors.<br/><br/>The findings suggest that if the central components in the organizational design were aligned, the benefits could include reduced absenteeism and turnover as well as higher productivity. Relevance to industry: The paper identifies organizational options on which managers, employees and ergonomists can focus when initiating new stress management practices and preventive changes aimed at redesigning knowledge work. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

KW - Human factors in knowledge work

KW - Stress management practice

KW - Stress prevention

KW - Job redesign

U2 - 10.1016/j.ergon.2012.02.006

DO - 10.1016/j.ergon.2012.02.006

JO - International Journal of Industrial Ergonomics

JF - International Journal of Industrial Ergonomics

SN - 0169-8141

IS - 4

VL - 42

SP - 325

EP - 334

ER -