Realiai, teisingumo nebuvimas darbe padidina gydytojo aptinkamų ligų šansus penkiasdešimčia procentų (pernelyg aukšti reikalavimai darbe - trisdešimt penkiais procentais). Ilgos darbo valandos padidina darbuotojų mirtingumą dvidešimčia procentų. JAV toks darbovietės stresas kasmet duoda šimtą dvidešimt tūkstančių papildomų mirčių ir šimtą devyniasdešimt milijardų dolerių papildomų išlaidų darbuotojų gydymui (žiūrėk čia) [1].
Mes nesame kvaili. Interneto laikais greit sužinome, kas mums svarbu. Neteisinga darbo liberalizacija privers dar daugiau mūsiškių trauktis iš Lietuvos.Na, o naikinti likusius yra trumparegiška. Lietuvos valdžia turi užsiimti Lietuvos išlikimu rimtai. Kinija turi dar pernelyg daug žmonių. Lietuva jau turi pernelyg mažai.
1. "• Work-family conflict more than doubled the odds of an employee reporting poor mental health and increased the odds of self-reported poor physical health by about 90 percent.
• Job insecurity raised the odds of self-reported poor physical health by about 50 percent.
• Low organizational justice increased the odds of having a physician-diagnosed condition by about 50 percent.
• High job demands raised the odds of a physician-diagnosed illness by 35 percent.
• Long work hours increased mortality by nearly 20 percent.
• Job insecurity raised the odds of self-reported poor physical health by about 50 percent.
• Low organizational justice increased the odds of having a physician-diagnosed condition by about 50 percent.
• High job demands raised the odds of a physician-diagnosed illness by 35 percent.
• Long work hours increased mortality by nearly 20 percent.
In addition, unemployment and low job control significantly upped the odds of all of the outcomes, while adverse psycho-social situations at work – lack of fairness, low social support and low job control – were as strongly associated with poor health as concrete factors like long hours and shift work.
In all, the researchers calculated that workplace stress contributes to at least 120,000 deaths each year – comparable to the annual number of accidental deaths in the United States – and accounts for up to $190 billion in health care costs."