Male workers bullied in the workplace are more inclined to leave the labour market altogether, according to a study.
According to research conducted by professors from Aarhus University and the University of Copenhagen, men react to workplace bullying by leaving the labour market for a period of time while women take prolonged sick leaves.
Their research was conducted with more than 3,000 respondents and 7% said they were subjected to bullying. Of those bullied, 43% were men.
Past research has shown that women bullied in the workplace are more likely to take more sick leaves and leads to an increase in use of antidepressants.
“[But] it seems that men who are bullied are more likely than women to go to work even when they're actually sick,” said Tine Mundbjerg Eriksen, study author and assistant professor of business economics at Aarhus University in Denmark.
“At the same time, it appears that bullying affects men's salary level negatively, which indicates that the bullying hampers their opportunities for pay increases and promotions.”
“One way of bullying is that your colleagues or your boss impede your ability to do your job properly, make changes to your work or hand the fun and important tasks to others."
Their research also showed that men are just as exposed to work or personal-related bullying as women but are slightly more exposed to physical intimidation, noted Science Daily.
This, she added, is the million dollar question, “Why do men primarily react by leaving the workplace while women react to bullying by taking prolonged sick leaves?”
She advocated for further research be conducted into this behaviour as studies have shown that workplace bullying is worse than threats and sexual harassment, with victims displaying symptoms similar to post-traumatic stress disorder.
“There are still many things we don't know exactly. For example if the bullying follows the person or the workplace or both. But it's an expensive problem for society and for the individual, so we'd like to dig deeper," said Mundbjerg Eriksen.
Her research, Long-term consequences of workplace bullying on sickness absence, was published in the most recent issue of Labour Economics.
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Their research was conducted with more than 3,000 respondents and 7% said they were subjected to bullying. Of those bullied, 43% were men.
Past research has shown that women bullied in the workplace are more likely to take more sick leaves and leads to an increase in use of antidepressants.
“[But] it seems that men who are bullied are more likely than women to go to work even when they're actually sick,” said Tine Mundbjerg Eriksen, study author and assistant professor of business economics at Aarhus University in Denmark.
“At the same time, it appears that bullying affects men's salary level negatively, which indicates that the bullying hampers their opportunities for pay increases and promotions.”
“One way of bullying is that your colleagues or your boss impede your ability to do your job properly, make changes to your work or hand the fun and important tasks to others."
Their research also showed that men are just as exposed to work or personal-related bullying as women but are slightly more exposed to physical intimidation, noted Science Daily.
This, she added, is the million dollar question, “Why do men primarily react by leaving the workplace while women react to bullying by taking prolonged sick leaves?”
She advocated for further research be conducted into this behaviour as studies have shown that workplace bullying is worse than threats and sexual harassment, with victims displaying symptoms similar to post-traumatic stress disorder.
“There are still many things we don't know exactly. For example if the bullying follows the person or the workplace or both. But it's an expensive problem for society and for the individual, so we'd like to dig deeper," said Mundbjerg Eriksen.
Her research, Long-term consequences of workplace bullying on sickness absence, was published in the most recent issue of Labour Economics.
Recent stories:
John Key’s resignation a warning to employers
The legalities of Christmas close-downs
Do you really need a compliance programme?