Posted: 12th July 2019
Posted in: Bones Blog, General HR, News
A new report has identified 40 per cent of Australian workers suffer from workplace loneliness, causing flow-on effects for both productivity and wellbeing.
The Workplace Loneliness report, launched this week by global HR institute Reventure, surveyed 1,010 employed Australians aged 18-65. It found 40 per cent of Australian workers feel lonely at work; with 38 per cent of lonely workers reporting they make more mistakes and 40 percent of lonely workers feeling less productive.
Furthermore, 47 per cent of those that identify as lonely are more likely to suffer poor wellbeing and 36 per cent of lonely workers report getting sick more often.
The report “builds on international commentary about the impact of loneliness on people’s health, including findings that loneliness has a similar effect as smoking 15 cigarettes a day,” Reventure said in a statement.
All sounds a little grim. But I do have one question (or many actually, but I’ll go with my main one): what percentage of those professing loneliness at work would also admit to being lonely away from the workplace?
It’s news to few people that technology has changed (and continues to change) the way we communicate…both in our personal lives and at work. In many workplaces, talking directly with colleagues is the exception rather than the norm, with emails, text and social media enabling us to communicate faster, more frequently and across greater distances than at any time before.
Paradoxically, this hyper-connectedness may be one reason loneliness is actually on the rise: the more digitally connected we become, the further apart we grow…emotionally, socially and physically. And for me, it would be challenging to compartmentalise an issue as complex as loneliness into “personal” and “professional” boxes: can someone not lonely in their personal life become lonely at work? In other words…does the degree of loneliness a person might suffer depend solely on their working environment?
Let’s assume you’re an employer seeing value in addressing such a topic. Here’s some options you might consider when combatting the issue of workplace loneliness:
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