Overview
What are psychological demands?
Psychological demands of any given job are documented and assessed along with the job’s physical demands. Psychological demands of the job help organizations determine whether any aspect of the job might be hazardous to the worker’s health and well-being. When hazards are identified, organizations can consider ways of minimizing risks through work redesign, analysis of work systems, risk assessment, etc. The assessment of psychological demands should include: assessment of time stressors (including time constraints, quotas, deadlines, machine pacing, etc.); breaks and rest periods; incentive systems (production bonuses, piece work, etc.); job monotony and the repetitive nature of some work; and hours of work (overtime requirements, 12-hour shifts, shift work, etc.).
An organization with a good psychological demands assessment process for its workers can state:
- It considers existing work systems and allows for work redesign.
- It assesses worker demand and job control issues, such as physical and psychological job demands.
- It assesses the level of job control and autonomy provided to its workers.
- It monitors the management system to address behaviours that affect workers and the workplace.
- It values worker input, particularly during periods of change and the execution of work.
- It monitors the level of emphasis on production issues.
- It reviews its management accountability system that addresses performance issues and how workers can report errors.
- It emphasizes recruitment, training and promotion practices that aim for the highest level of interpersonal competencies at work.
Why is attention to psychological demands important?
Interpersonal and emotional competencies are skills related to managing emotions and relationships, including effectively solving challenging people problems at work. When there is a strong fit between workers’ psychological skills and strengths and the requirements of the position they hold, physical health complaints and depression are reduced. Additionally, workers have greater self-esteem and a more positive self-concept. A strong fit between one’s emotional and interpersonal skills and position also leads to enhanced performance, job satisfaction and employee retention.
When a worker’s psychological capabilities and the requirements of their position do not match, this may result in job strain. This can cause emotional distress, overthinking, defensiveness, fatigue and grief. For the workplace, this can result in a reduced applicant pool, lack of employee engagement, reduced productivity, greater interpersonal conflict and increased turnover.
FAQs
Action
Next steps: Considering psychological demands in the workplace
Objective
Benefits
Reflection Questions