How do line managers experience and handle the return to work of employees on sick leave due to work-related stress? A one-year follow-up study

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

How do line managers experience and handle the return to work of employees on sick leave due to work-related stress? A one-year follow-up study. / Ladegaard, Yun; Skakon, Janne; Elrond, Andreas Friis; Netterstrøm, Bo.

In: Disability and Rehabilitation, Vol. 41, No. 1, 02.01.2019, p. 44-52.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ladegaard, Y, Skakon, J, Elrond, AF & Netterstrøm, B 2019, 'How do line managers experience and handle the return to work of employees on sick leave due to work-related stress? A one-year follow-up study', Disability and Rehabilitation, vol. 41, no. 1, pp. 44-52. https://doi.org/10.1080/09638288.2017.1370733

APA

Ladegaard, Y., Skakon, J., Elrond, A. F., & Netterstrøm, B. (2019). How do line managers experience and handle the return to work of employees on sick leave due to work-related stress? A one-year follow-up study. Disability and Rehabilitation, 41(1), 44-52. https://doi.org/10.1080/09638288.2017.1370733

Vancouver

Ladegaard Y, Skakon J, Elrond AF, Netterstrøm B. How do line managers experience and handle the return to work of employees on sick leave due to work-related stress? A one-year follow-up study. Disability and Rehabilitation. 2019 Jan 2;41(1):44-52. https://doi.org/10.1080/09638288.2017.1370733

Author

Ladegaard, Yun ; Skakon, Janne ; Elrond, Andreas Friis ; Netterstrøm, Bo. / How do line managers experience and handle the return to work of employees on sick leave due to work-related stress? A one-year follow-up study. In: Disability and Rehabilitation. 2019 ; Vol. 41, No. 1. pp. 44-52.

Bibtex

@article{06f68a9f014841c683e8fafad7fa672f,
title = "How do line managers experience and handle the return to work of employees on sick leave due to work-related stress? A one-year follow-up study",
abstract = "Purpose: To examine how line managers experience and manage the return to work process of employees on sick leave due to work-related stress and to identify supportive and inhibiting factors. Materials and methods: Semi-structured interviews with 15 line managers who have had employees on sick leave due to work-related stress. The grounded theory approach was employed. Results: Even though managers may accept the overall concept of work-related stress, they focus on personality and individual circumstances when an employee is sick-listed due to work-related stress. The lack of a common understanding of stress creates room for this focus. Line managers experience cross-pressure, discrepancies between strategic and human-relationship perspectives and a lack of organizational support in the return to work process. Conclusion: Organizations should aim to provide support for line managers. Research-based knowledge and guidelines on work-related stress and return to work process are essential, as is the involvement of coworkers. A commonly accepted definition of stress and a systematic risk assessment is also important. Cross-pressure on line managers should be minimized and room for adequate preventive actions should be provided as such an approach could support both the return to work process and the implementation of important interventions in the work environment.Implication for rehabilitation Organizations should aim to provide support for line managers handling the return to work process. Cross-pressure on line managers should be minimized and adequate preventive actions should be provided in relation to the return to work process. Research-based knowledge and guidelines on work-related stress and return to work are essential. A common and formal definition of stress should be emphasized in the workplace.",
keywords = "cross-pressure, managers, mental health, Return to work, sickness absence, work stress",
author = "Yun Ladegaard and Janne Skakon and Elrond, {Andreas Friis} and Bo Netterstr{\o}m",
year = "2019",
month = jan,
day = "2",
doi = "10.1080/09638288.2017.1370733",
language = "English",
volume = "41",
pages = "44--52",
journal = "Disability and Rehabilitation",
issn = "0963-8288",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - How do line managers experience and handle the return to work of employees on sick leave due to work-related stress? A one-year follow-up study

AU - Ladegaard, Yun

AU - Skakon, Janne

AU - Elrond, Andreas Friis

AU - Netterstrøm, Bo

PY - 2019/1/2

Y1 - 2019/1/2

N2 - Purpose: To examine how line managers experience and manage the return to work process of employees on sick leave due to work-related stress and to identify supportive and inhibiting factors. Materials and methods: Semi-structured interviews with 15 line managers who have had employees on sick leave due to work-related stress. The grounded theory approach was employed. Results: Even though managers may accept the overall concept of work-related stress, they focus on personality and individual circumstances when an employee is sick-listed due to work-related stress. The lack of a common understanding of stress creates room for this focus. Line managers experience cross-pressure, discrepancies between strategic and human-relationship perspectives and a lack of organizational support in the return to work process. Conclusion: Organizations should aim to provide support for line managers. Research-based knowledge and guidelines on work-related stress and return to work process are essential, as is the involvement of coworkers. A commonly accepted definition of stress and a systematic risk assessment is also important. Cross-pressure on line managers should be minimized and room for adequate preventive actions should be provided as such an approach could support both the return to work process and the implementation of important interventions in the work environment.Implication for rehabilitation Organizations should aim to provide support for line managers handling the return to work process. Cross-pressure on line managers should be minimized and adequate preventive actions should be provided in relation to the return to work process. Research-based knowledge and guidelines on work-related stress and return to work are essential. A common and formal definition of stress should be emphasized in the workplace.

AB - Purpose: To examine how line managers experience and manage the return to work process of employees on sick leave due to work-related stress and to identify supportive and inhibiting factors. Materials and methods: Semi-structured interviews with 15 line managers who have had employees on sick leave due to work-related stress. The grounded theory approach was employed. Results: Even though managers may accept the overall concept of work-related stress, they focus on personality and individual circumstances when an employee is sick-listed due to work-related stress. The lack of a common understanding of stress creates room for this focus. Line managers experience cross-pressure, discrepancies between strategic and human-relationship perspectives and a lack of organizational support in the return to work process. Conclusion: Organizations should aim to provide support for line managers. Research-based knowledge and guidelines on work-related stress and return to work process are essential, as is the involvement of coworkers. A commonly accepted definition of stress and a systematic risk assessment is also important. Cross-pressure on line managers should be minimized and room for adequate preventive actions should be provided as such an approach could support both the return to work process and the implementation of important interventions in the work environment.Implication for rehabilitation Organizations should aim to provide support for line managers handling the return to work process. Cross-pressure on line managers should be minimized and adequate preventive actions should be provided in relation to the return to work process. Research-based knowledge and guidelines on work-related stress and return to work are essential. A common and formal definition of stress should be emphasized in the workplace.

KW - cross-pressure

KW - managers

KW - mental health

KW - Return to work

KW - sickness absence

KW - work stress

U2 - 10.1080/09638288.2017.1370733

DO - 10.1080/09638288.2017.1370733

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28845715

AN - SCOPUS:85028564201

VL - 41

SP - 44

EP - 52

JO - Disability and Rehabilitation

JF - Disability and Rehabilitation

SN - 0963-8288

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 217649444