Medical advertising

Older workers are the healthy 'survivors' of the workplace

2 November 2009
Page 1 2

Experts at the University of Nottingham say our stress levels at work peak when we reach about 50 to 55 years of age and decrease as we head towards retirement.

In the first comprehensive report into age related stress and health at work to be carried out in Britain, researchers from the Institute of Work, Health and Organisations also found that the effects of stress in our working lives can stay with us well into retirement.

The research, led by Amanda Griffiths, Professor of Occupational Health Psychology, reviewed hundreds of publications from the last 20 years. Professor Griffiths, said: "Work related stress is thought to be responsible for more lost working days than any other cause and it is becoming clear that it is also one factor affecting older workers' willingness and ability to remain in the labour force. Therefore, protecting tomorrow's older workers, as well as today's, will pay dividends, as older workers will form a major part of tomorrow's workforce."

Many of us are likely to be working much longer than we expected. Until now the majority of reviews of research into work-related stress – its causes and its effects – have been based on large groups of workers and very rarely distinguished by age. This report, for TAEN – The Age and Employment Network, Age Concern and Help the Aged, aimed to address that gap.

This new research suggests that the reason studies show smaller number of workers report high stress levels once in their 50s might be because they have left stressful posts in favour of something less demanding; they already have retired voluntarily or because of ill health; or increasing seniority can give staff more control over their working life which makes it less stressful. The report says this makes older staff the healthy 'survivors' of the workplace.

Page 1 2

Signup to Health eNewsletter

 

Related Diseases

 

Related Articles:


Article Tools:


E-mail E-mail Bookmark/Add to Favourites Print Print twitter Twitter facebook Facebook

 

Article Comments

Comment from: Lawrence Pope | 2/11/2009 2:26:50 PM
I'm now retired - when I reached my 50s I was an Australian Federal Police Officer with many major investigations and over 30 years experience behind me when I was, like my peers, pushed aside for 20 somethings with degrees. Of course there was less stress, we just gave up and waited for retirement/redundancy.

Add your comment to this article





 Change Code


 Enter the above security Code

User-generated Content Guidelines

Rate this article

  • Current Rating: 5.0/5

Current Sponsors
Medical advertising
Current Sponsors
Sponsors Logos
Current Sponsors
Our site has been approved by the HealthInsite Editorial Board to be a HealthInsite information partner site PANDORA is a digital archive dedicated to the preservation of and long term access to Australian online electronic publications of national significance WAITTA Winner 2008 Online secretsFinalist priministeraward
Prime Minister's Award
secretsFinalist
Current Sponsors

Virtual Medical Centre

Please be aware that we do not give advice on your individual medical condition,
if you want advice please see your treating physician.

Information on this site must be discussed with your treating doctor.

Virtual Medical Centre © 2002 - 2009 | Privacy Policy Last updated 21 Nov 2009

For Banner Advertising
MediaSmart

Website and videos by
Titan Interactive, Website and Web Design Perth Australia

^ Back to Top