Toggle high contrast

'Mild' stress damaging to work prospects

Issue date

'Mild' stress damaging to work prospects

Even relatively mild stress can lead to long term disability and an inability to work, a new study has found. The large population based study published online this week in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health reports it is well known that mental health problems are associated with long term disability, but adds the impact of milder forms of psychological stress is likely to have been under-estimated. A research team headed by Dheeraj Rai of the University of Bristol tracked between 2002 and 2007 the health of more than 17,000 working adults up to the age of 64, who had been randomly selected from the population in the Stockholm area. During the monitoring period, 649 people started receiving disability benefit - 203 for a mental health problem and the remainder for physical ill-health. Higher levels of stress at the start of the study were associated with a significantly greater likelihood of subsequently being awarded long term disability benefits. But even those with mild stress were up to 70 per cent more likely to receive disability benefits, after taking account of other factors likely to influence the results, such as lifestyle and alcohol intake. One in four of these benefits awarded for a physical illness, such as high blood pressure, angina, and stroke, and almost two thirds awarded for a mental illness, were attributable to stress. The authors say that it is important to consider their findings in the context of modern working life, which places greater demands on employees, and social factors, such as fewer close personal relationships and supportive networks. These factors lead them to ask: 'Are the strains and demands of modern society commonly exceeding human ability?'

Dheeraj Rai and others. Psychological distress and risk of long-term disability: population-based longitudinal study, Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, Online First, March 2011; doi 10.1136/jech.2010.119644 [abstract].

Enable Two-Factor Authentication

To access the admin area, you will need to setup two-factor authentication (TFA).

Setup now