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Apr 24, 2014

Work can be sickening. Literally.

During an appearance at the recent Great Place to Work annual conference this month n New Orleans, Stanford business school professor Jeffrey Pfeffer presented a devastating case for the negative effects of U.S. workplaces on our health.

Pointing out that human sustainability ought to be at least as important a goal as environmental sustainability, Pfeffer described bad work environments as environmental hazards and even more dangerous than carbon emissions or second-hand smoke.

Why work is dangerous to our health

In fact, they may well be one of the causes for the notoriously high cost of health care in this country. Pfeffer backed up this assertion with some pretty strong data. Here are just a few facts from his presentation:

  • According to a 2009 study, lack of health insurance is responsible for 45,000 deaths in the United States each year. And if you think this statistic is only relevant to companies that don’t offer health benefits, think again. Factors including high out-of-pocket costs and limits to eligibility (nearly all companies offer benefits only to those working above a certain number of hours) mean that in fact, only 62 percent of employees working in companies that offer health insurance are actually insured. (Of course, in coming years the Affordable Care Act may change these numbers.)
  • A 2002 study found that employees doing highly demanding work combined with having low control over that work had more than double the rate of dying from cardiovascular disease than those not in this situation.
  • A variety of studies summarized by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health have found connections between overwork and increased injury, unhealthy weight gain, increased smoking and alcohol abuse, poorer health in general and, well, death.
  • Other studies have found connections between work-family conflict and substance abuse; depression; anxiety and other mood disorders; and overall poor physical health. (See abstracts of two such studies here and here.)
  • Being treated unfairly also has a high cost to our health. According to one literature review, “low justice has been shown to increase the risk of mental distress, psychiatric disorder, sickness absence, and poor self-rated health status.” (It turns out, according to Pfeffer, that self-reports of poor health are one of the best predictors of actual poor health.)
  • Layoffs are also potentially fatal, both for those “surviving” the layoff (an expression that turns out to be particularly apt) and those let go. According to one study, both absence due to sickness and the prevalence of smoking were higher for employees remaining after a major downsizing.
  • Meanwhile, those losing their jobs have an increased mortality risk of 44 percent, including a two-fold increase in suicides and alcohol-related deaths during the first four years following the lay-off. Another study found that even those who found a new job after being laid off had a 97 percent higher risk of developing a new health condition than those who hadn’t been laid off.

Lower health costs in Europe

As Pfeffer pointed out, as countries get richer, they tend to address environmental hazards that affect health: they clean up their water, they clean up their air. And that, in fact, is what we see in the United States, as well as in other advanced industrialized nations.

The percentage of health care costs associated with a slew of environmental hazards has gone down — except in the case of unhealthy workplaces. Here, the U.S. is a total outlier.

Pfeffer’s research suggests that European countries have, on average, a 22.4 percent lower fraction of overall health care costs stemming from unhealthy workplace practices than we do here in the United States — which means the U.S. could save $42 billion in health care costs simply by emulating the workplace practices of the average European country.

Never mind emulating those of the most enlightened (in workplace terms) European countries, which he identifies as France, Denmark and Slovenia —  path would lead to a savings of $66.5 billion. All told, Pfeffer has weighed the research and come to the conclusion that the environmental hazard he calls an “unhealthy workplace” is responsible for approximately 125,000 excess deaths and $130 billion in excess costs in the United States each year.

And, by the way, the solution to this horror is not workplace wellness programs, which Pfeffer sees as a fairly worthless band-aid applied to a self-inflicted wound.  No, the solution is simply (OK, not so simply) the flip side of his data: It’s providing more job control, reducing work-family conflict, being fair to employees and providing social support at work.

Avoiding layoffs would help, too

It’s also avoiding layoffs. Pfeffer quotes evidence that while layoffs “increase fear and stress, they do not lead to higher profits, productivity, stock price, innovation or quality.”

So, should companies all pitch in to cut the price of health care in this country and (by the way) stop killing people, simply because they care? Well, that would be nice, but it’s not necessary.

As is so often the case when we talk about great workplaces, it’s not a matter of choosing between doing good and doing well. All of these things we’re talking about: greater control over work, reduction of work-life conflict, perception of institutional justice, a supportive environment — all of these have been shown to reduce turnover, attract strong employees, increase engagement, increase productivity, reduce absenteeism.

As just one bit of evidence for this, companies on the Great Place to Work list — aka Fortune’s “100 Best Companies to Work For”—consistently outperform other companies on a range of measures, including the stock market. Which means, we are dying for no good reason — and it’s costing us a bundle.

Open wide, America! It’s time to take your medicine.

This originally appeared on the Robin Hardman Communications blog.