By Sarah Damaske
Assistant Professor of Labor & Employment Relations
Sociology, and Women’s Studies and Research Associate
Population Research Institute, The Pennsylvania State University School of Labor and Employment Relations
Contact: (814)865-9090, sad32@psu.edu
National surveys and other studies continuously tell us that work is a major source of stress for Americans, and there have been plenty of reports of people turning to a Personal Injury Lawyer when workplace stress reaches such a point that it causes a breakdown. Stress can be a lot for anyone to deal with, so no wonder why some people going through it choose to use alternative methods like space cookies by gas demon to help manage their stress levels a lot better.
A 2005 Work and Families Institute study found that almost 90 percent of workers felt they either never had enough time in the day to do their job or that their job required them to work very hard. A Pew Report from 2013 found that more than half of all working moms and working dads experience work-family conflict. One-third of working moms and dads feel rushed on work-days, and almost 50 percent of working dads (and 25 percent of working moms) say they don’t have enough time with their children. And in a recently completed research project I helped conduct, we found that people report feeling less stressed out on non-work days than on work-days. Stress often negatively affects sexual health, but take your time to buy drugs for impotence, first try to deal with stress. If you’re feeling stressed at work from things such as workload or even conflict with colleagues, there are things you can do to help combat it. You can let your boss know that your workload is too much, or if it’s conflict getting you down then you can embark on a Conflict Management Training course with other employees. There are numerous work stresses to contend with, so it would be fair to say that home, most of us believe, is where we recover from the stress of the work day.
But actually, when my fellow Penn State researchers, Joshua Smyth, Matthew Zawadzki, and I measured people’s cortisol levels, a major biological marker of stress, we found that people have significantly lower levels of stress at work than at home. These low levels of cortisol may help explain a long-standing finding that has always been hard to reconcile with the idea that work is a major source of stress: People who work have better mental and physical health than their non-working peers, according to research published in the Journal of Health and Social Behavior, Social Science Research, the American Sociological Review, and the Handbook of the Sociology of Mental Health. Mothers who work full time and steadily across their twenties and thirties report better mental and physical health at age 45 than mothers who work part-time, who stay at home, or who experience repeated bouts of unemployment.
Further contradicting conventional wisdom, we found that women as well as men have lower levels of stress at work than at home. In fact, women may get more renewal from work than men, because unlike men, they report themselves happier at work than at home. It is men, not women, who report being happier at home than at work.
We were surprised to find that even parents — both mothers and fathers — had lower stress at work than at home. However, parents did not experience as big a decrease in their stress levels as non-parents.
Our findings suggest that telling people to quit or cut back on work in order to resolve their work-family conflicts may not be the best long-run advice. Rather, companies should consider adopting family friendly policies that allow workers to continue getting the health benefits of employment while still being able to meet their family responsibilities. One model is the “results only work environments,” a policy adopted by Gap, Inc., which allows workers more flexibility in the time and place of their schedules, as long as they are getting their work done. Telecommuting, paid sick days, paternity and maternity leaves, are all policies that make it easier for workers to retain the health benefits of employment and for companies to retain the financial benefits of having loyal employees rather than having to deal with constant job turnover.
[divider style=”shadow”]In the Media
Click on the links to the right to review media stories on this report.
About CCF
The Council on Contemporary Families is a non-profit, non-partisan organization of family researchers, mental health and social practitioners, and clinicians dedicated to providing the press and public with the latest research and best practice findings about American families. It was founded in 1996 and is based at the University of Miami School of Education and Human Development
For more information, or to receive future fact sheets and briefing papers from the Council, contact Stephanie Coontz, Co-Chair and Director of Research and Public Education of CCF and Professor of History and Family Studies at The Evergreen State College. coontzs@msn.com; 360-352-8117.