placeholder
Stuart Gentle Publisher at Onrec

NHS and local government employees are most stressed out workers

.

The latest annual survey of employee attitudes from people management experts, the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD), shows that public sector workers are increasingly stressed and dissatisfied with their work. As many as 38 per cent of NHS workers and 30 per cent of local government workers find their work very stressful with nurses, doctors and teachers among those most likely to suffer stress.

Employees say that the main causes of stress are high workload and long hours, which have contributed to the long-term decline in satisfaction in satisfaction among public sector workers. The survey is one of a number of reports suggesting that front-line public sector workers continue to suffer high levels of work-related stress. Despite this, public sector workers remain motivated, committed and loyal to their role and their organisation.

Mike Emmott, CIPD Adviser in Employee Relations says, The findings underline the huge task facing the Government as it attempts to reform and improve public services. Public sector workers are experiencing higher levels of organisational change than the private sector and this presents a further challenge for managers. The NHS uses relatively few HR practices. National and local governments need to pay more attention to the way in which people management policies are implemented.

This is likely to put a significant strain on line managers who may not have the resources or support to deal with such change.

The CIPD survey, Pressure at Work and the Psychological Contract shows the psychological contract (the mutual expectations of employer and employees) to be worse in the public than in the private sector. Levels of satisfaction, trust and commitment are all lower in the public sector. For example, only 7 per cent of people in central government believe strongly that the organisation cares about my opinions; while 2 out of 5 feel fairly treated by their managers and supervisors compared with more than half in other sectors. This negative picture of the state of morale in the public sector reinforces that in the recent Audit Commission report1.

Meanwhile, trust among workers in senior management is not particularly high across all sectors: only one in three people trust senior management a lot to look after their best interests.

The CIPD survey provides a consistent baseline against which UK organisations can benchmark their own employee relations and explore trends in employee attitudes to work, and relationships with managers and colleagues.

Mike Emmott, CIPD Adviser on Employee Relations says: The general picture is that employee attitudes are fairly stable. The relationship between managers and the people they manage is critical to organisational performance. Organisations need to devote more attention to earning and maintaining the confidence of their people.

Although concerns about insecurity and dissatisfaction are often exaggerated, there are clear indications that trust levels need to be lifted and employee commitment is under pressure from long hours and work intensity.

Key findings:

* 38 per cent of NHS workers and 30 per cent of local government workers find their work either stressful or very stressful against an average of 25% for all workers.

* 42% of employees are at least fairly confident about finding a new job if they get made redundant, while 72% say that it is unlikely that they will quit their job this year.

* Over 75% of the workforce favour workplace legislation to introduce work councils, limit working hours or make the retirement age more flexible.

* 84% are proud to say who they work for while 85% say that they are fairly motivated in their current job. Over half report loyalty to their organisation, with only 17% reporting no loyalty.

* Only one in three people trust senior management a lot to look after their best interests.

* Nearly 50 per cent of central Government workers say that what happens at work isn't really important, it's just my job - 3 times the percentage in the NHS.