Tuesday, 11 October 2016

Friendly Colleagues May Boost Your Health

Not just the right job, but the relationships with colleagues and the social groups we form at the workplace may be linked to better health and lower burnout, new research found . Previous studies on the relationships between people and their workplaces focus on issues of satisfaction, motivation, and performance, but much less on health and well-being. While many people assume that finding the right job that fits your personality and skills is the key to a healthy work life, scientists have shown that how strongly we identify with the people or organization where we work is associated with better health at work.
This study is the first large scale analysis showing that organizational identification is related to better health. These results show that both performance and health are enhanced to the extent that workplaces provide people with a sense of ‘we and ‘us’. The team reviewed 58 studies covering 19,000 people in a variety of occupations, from service and health to sales and military work, in 15 countries. While the type of hob was not a significant factor in the link between social identification and health benefits, several factors influenced the relationship.

Social identification contributes to both psychological and physiological health, but the health benefits are stronger for psychological health. The positive psychological benefit may stem from the support provided by the work group but also the meaning and purpose that people derive from membership in social groups. We are less burnt out and have greater well-being when our team and our organization provide us with a sense of belonging and community – when it gives us a sense of ‘weness’. The researchers also found that the health benefits of identifying with the workplace are strongest when there are similar levels of identification within a group – that is, when identification is shared

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