Stress reactions in organizations: syndromes, causes and consequences.

This study examines the prevalence, causes, and consequences of stress reactions among over 2000 high status members of a large organization in Canada. Five stress syndromes were identified: emotional distress, medication use, cardiovascular disturbance, gastrointestinal disturbance, and allergy respiratory disturbance. The study demonstrates the effects of sociocultural variables on selected stress responses to compare typical symptoms of French vs. English Canadians, and in demographic variables such as age and sex as reflections of stages in the life cycle. Once the sociocultural and demographic effects were isolated, the study revealed a major occupational effect in the distribution of stress syndromes. Managers compared with staff and operations people show a low prevalence of stress reactions. The explanation of this finding led to the evaluation of four possible causes: the maturity effect, the vulnerability effect, the bureaucratic effect, and the power effect. The first two causes assume the objective stressors in the environment are about the same for all occupational groups in the study and the variations in symptoms result from major personality factors held in common among the occupational groups. The second two causes assume that the variations in symptoms result from major differences in the environments of the three occupational groups. Analysis suggests that psychodynamic factors affect the tolerance for stress and the choice of syndrome. The environment, particularly the frustrations and deprivations associated with bureaucracy and the lack of power, activates the defenses against anger and rage that in turn lead to symptom formation. The study concludes with the paradox of the bureaucratic experience. Designed to minimize the uses of power in negotiating work procedures and relationships, bureaucracy requires the mobilization and uses of power to, at a minimum, reduce the risks of falling ill from frustration and anger and, at a maximum, to sense one's impact on events.

[1]  J. G. Miller,et al.  The Nature of Living Systems , 1971, The Quarterly Review of Biology.

[2]  R. Rahe,et al.  Behavior and life satisfactions characteristics of Swedish subjects with myocardial infarction. , 1972, Journal of chronic diseases.

[3]  J. G. Miller Living systems: the organization. , 1972, Behavioral science.

[4]  S J Zyzanski,et al.  Basic dimensions within the coronary-prone behavior pattern. , 1970, Journal of chronic diseases.

[5]  L. Hinkle,et al.  Occupation, education, and coronary heart disease. Risk is influenced more by education and background than by occupational experiences, in the Bell System. , 1968, Science.

[6]  L. Hinkle,et al.  Coronary deaths and organizational mobility. The 30-year experience of 1,160 men. , 1967, Archives of environmental health.

[7]  D. C. Leighton The character of danger : psychiatric symptoms in selected communities , 1965 .

[8]  Steven E. Deutsch,et al.  Mental Health of the Industrial Worker: A Detroit Study by Arthur Kornhauser (review) , 1965 .

[9]  M. Friedman,et al.  A Predictive Study of Coronary Heart Disease: The Western Collaborative Group Study , 1964 .

[10]  P. Castelnuovo-Tedesco Emotional Antecedents of Perforation of Ulcers of the Stomach and Duodenum , 1962, Psychosomatic medicine.

[11]  S. Cobb,et al.  Frequency of peptic ulcer among executives, craftsmen, and foreman. , 1962, Journal of occupational medicine. : official publication of the Industrial Medical Association.

[12]  S. Wolf Disease as a Way of Life: Neural Integration in Systemic Pathology , 2015, Perspectives in biology and medicine.

[13]  A. Macmillan The Health Opinion Survey: Technique for Estimating Prevalence of Psychoneurotic and Related Types of Disorder in Communities , 1957 .

[14]  G. L. Engel,et al.  Studies of ulcerative colitis. III. The nature of the psychologic processes. , 1955, The American journal of medicine.

[15]  Petrus Gerardus Vertin Bedrijfsgeneeskundige aspecten van het ulcus pepticum , 1954 .

[16]  R. Merton Social Theory and Social Structure , 1958 .

[17]  S. Stouffer,et al.  The American soldier : combat and its aftermath , 1949 .