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June 2, 2008
WCB Stats Grossly Underestimate Mental Injuries
21,000 Victorians suffer from work-related depression
"Almost one in six cases of depression among working
Victorians are caused by job stress, amounting to more than 21,000 cases of
preventable depression in Victoria each year, a new University of Melbourne
study shows. . . . This translates to 21,437 working Victorians suffering from
preventable depression caused by job stress; By comparison, 30-times fewer
workers receive workers compensation for stress-related mental disorders,
suggesting that workers compensation statistics grossly under-represent
the true extent of the problem."
Media Release, Monday 2 June 2008
Almost one in six cases of depression among working
Victorians are caused by job stress, amounting to more than 21,000 cases of
preventable depression in Victoria each year, a new University of Melbourne
study shows.
The study, led by Associate Professor Tony LaMontagne from
the McCaughey Centre: VicHealth Centre for the Promotion of Mental Health and
Community Wellbeing at the University of Melbourne with research partners from
Monash and British Columbia universities, is published this month in the
international journal BMC Public Health. It estimates that:
More working women than men experience job stress, and job stress is
more likely in lower skilled occupations; Job stress exposure
patterns were then combined with previous research showing that job stress
doubles the risk of depression to estimate the proportion of depression caused
by job stress among working people; Nearly one in five (17 per
cent) working women suffering depression can attribute their condition to job
stress and more than one in eight (13 per cent) working men with depression
have problems due to job stress; This translates to 21,437 working
Victorians suffering from preventable depression caused by job stress;
By comparison, 30-times fewer workers receive workers compensation
for stress-related mental disorders, suggesting that workers compensation
statistics grossly under-represent the true extent of the problem.
Stressful working conditions in this study were defined as a combination of
high job demands and low control over how the job gets done (or job
strain). The study, led by Associate Professor Tony LaMontagne
from the McCaughey Centre: VicHealth Centre for the Promotion of Mental Health
and Community Wellbeing at the University of Melbourne with research partners
from Monash and British Columbia universities is published this month in the
international journal BMC Public Health. It estimates that:
More working women than men experience job stress, and job stress is
more likely in lower skilled occupations; Job stress exposure
patterns were then combined with previous research showing that job stress
doubles the risk of depression to estimate the proportion of depression caused
by job stress among working people; Nearly one in five (17 per
cent) working women suffering depression can attribute their condition to job
stress and more than one in eight (13 per cent) working men with depression
have problems due to job stress; This translates to 21,437 working
Victorians suffering from preventable depression caused by job stress;
By comparison, 30-times fewer workers receive workers compensation
for stress-related mental disorders, suggesting that workers compensation
statistics grossly under-represent the true extent of the problem.
National Depression Initiative beyondblue estimates that at least one in five
Australians will experience depression or another mental illness at some stage
in their lives. Researchers analysed job stress data collected from a
2003 survey of 1100 Victorian workers. Numbers of prevalent
depression cases among working Victorians were estimated from the National
Mental Health survey and workers compensation statistics were obtained
from a national database. Associate Professor LaMontagne said women
and those in lower-skilled occupations are more likely to experience job
stress, and so bear a greater share of job stress-related depression.
This represents a substantial and inequitably distributed public health
problem, Associate Professor LaMontagne said. The burden
of mental illness in the general population follows a similar demographic
pattern, suggesting that job stress is a substantial contributor to mental
health inequalities, he said. Associate Professor LaMontagne
said that solutions are available to address this problem. The
evidence shows that improving job control, moderating demands, and providing
more support from supervisors and co-workers makes a difference, he
says. Our hope is that a better understanding of the scale of this
problem will lead to more support for employees, particularly for lower-skilled
workers and working women. VicHealth CEO, Todd Harper said the
study shows that workplaces need to do more to prevent workplace related mental
health problems. "Given so many people spend a large part of their
day at work, we need to find the best ways workplaces can promote good health
rather than cause health problems, Mr Harper said.
Workplaces provide an important setting to prevent illness through
strategies to reduce stress, as well as programs that address nutrition,
physical inactivity and smoking," Mr Harper added. The study was
funded by the Victorian Health Promotion Foundation (VicHealth), the National
Heart Foundation, the National Health and Medical Research Council, Canadian
Institute for Health Research and the Michael Smith Foundation (Canada).
The full study, LaMontagne AD, Keegel T, Vallance D, Ostry A, and Wolfe R
(2008): Job strainattributable depression in a sample of working
Australians: Assessing the contribution to health inequalities. BMC Public
Health 8:181 is available at
www.biomedcentral.com/content/pdf/1471-2458-8-181.pdf.
(or australian_stress_compensation_study.pdf).
More information about this article:
Janine Sim-Jones Media Officer
janinesj@unimelb.edu.au Tel:
+61 3 8344 7220 Mob: 0400 893 378
http://uninews.unimelb.edu.au/articleid_5212.html
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