Abstract

Mental health challenges are a ubiquitous workplace concern, with approximately 20% of people having a mental illness and a majority of employees reporting at least one symptom of poor mental health. Yet research on work and mental health challenges remains fragmented and relatively sparse. To address this issue, we provide a historical overview of workplace attention to mental health as compared to physical health, noting areas where workplaces’ response to physical health could serve as a model for attention to mental health. We then share results of an interdisciplinary review of 556 studies on mental health challenges and work, in which we integrate themes in three broad categories: antecedents, outcomes, and interventions for mental health challenges. Importantly, our review suggests that a primary impediment to progress is the frequent theoretical and methodological conflation between (poor) mental health and mental illness, with unexplained inconsistency in the temporality, severity, and content of mental health measures across studies. Based on these findings we present suggestions for critical areas of future research, including an increased emphasis on proactive workplace interventions and research that addresses the distinction—and relationship—between mental health and mental illness at work.

Full Text
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