In this economy many HR executives have worried about the mental health of
their full-time employees, but they should actually be more concerned about
their temporary workers, according to research published by McGill
University.
Workers hired for temporary or contract work face a higher risk of developing
mental health problems such as depression, according to the research authored by
Amelie Quesnel-Vallee, a medical sociologist at Montreal-based McGill.
Today there’s a belief among many employers that having a workforce that is
flexible—filled with many temporary and contract workers—leads to greater
productivity, says Quesnel-Vallee.
“But if we factor in this increased risk for mental health problems, which we
know is a leading reason for absenteeism, that theory might not be correct,” she
says.
The study, based on records collected biennially between 1992 and 2002 from
the U.S. National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979, focuses on workers who
don’t expect to be with their current jobs for more than one year. It was
presented for the first time Sunday, August 9, in San Francisco at the American
Sociological Association’s annual meeting.
“Employers need to be mindful of the fact that obviously they have economic
imperatives and there is temptation to go with a more flexible workforce, but
the bottom line is that it may not be as obvious as they might predict,”
Quesnel-Vallee says.
As of 2005, about 4 percent of the U.S. workforce—or 5.7 million American
workers—held temporary positions, according to the most recent data available
from the Current Population Survey, a monthly survey of about 50,000 households
conducted by the Census Bureau for the Bureau of Labor Statistics. There are
currently 1.8 million workers employed by temporary agencies, according to the
BLS.
It would make sense that the paper’s findings are more acute today given the
economic environment, says Janice Dragotta, senior consultant, health and
productivity, in the San Francisco office of Watson Wyatt Worldwide.
Other than the instability of their jobs, another contributing factor to
temporary workers’ inclination to mental health issues could be that they often
lack social ties to the rest of the workforce, she says.
“They may not have the opportunity to develop relationships with others or
have a sense of work-family that others do in their work lives,” she says.
Also,
many times temporary workers don’t have access to health care benefits, so if
they are suffering from depression or other issues, they can’t see a doctor
without paying out of pocket, she says.
“If they are beginning to feel some anxiety or depression, they may have less
access to potential health care,” Dragotta says.
—Jessica Marquez
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