Frontiers in Public Health (Jul 2022)

Leave Me Alone With Your Symptoms! Social Exclusion at the Workplace Mediates the Relationship of Employee's Mental Illness and Sick Leave

  • Benjamin Pascal Frank,
  • Clara Magdalena Theil,
  • Nathalie Brill,
  • Hanna Christiansen,
  • Christina Schwenck,
  • Meinhard Kieser,
  • Corinna Reck,
  • Ricarda Steinmayr,
  • Linda Wirthwein,
  • Kathleen Otto,
  • The COMPARE-family Research Group,
  • Kristin Gilbert,
  • Markus Stracke,
  • Christina Klose,
  • Johannes Krisam,
  • Moritz Pohl,
  • Claudia Buntrock,
  • David Daniel Ebert,
  • Jürgen Margraf,
  • Silvia Schneider,
  • Rudolf Stark,
  • Julia Metzger,
  • Julia Glombiewski,
  • Anette Schröder,
  • Jens Heider,
  • Winfried Rief,
  • Pia Eitenmüller

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.892174
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

Read online

Although a substantial part of employees suffers from a mental illness, the work situation of this population still is understudied. Previous research suggests that people with a mental illness experience discrimination in the workplace, which is known to have detrimental effects on health. Building on the stereotype content model and allostatic load theory, the present study investigated whether employees with a mental illness become socially excluded at the workplace and therefore show more days of sick leave. Overall, 86 employees diagnosed with a mental disorder were interviewed and completed online-surveys. Path analyses supported the hypotheses, yielding a serial mediation: The interview-rated severity of the mental disorder had an indirect effect on the days of sick leave, mediated by the symptomatic burden and the social exclusion at the workplace. In the light of the costs associated with absenteeism the present paper highlights the harmfulness of discrimination. Organizations and especially supervisors need to be attentive for signs of exclusion within their teams and try to counteract as early as possible.

Keywords