Overview
What is psychological protection?
Psychological protection is where workers’ psychological safety is ensured. Workplace psychological safety is shown when workers feel able to put themselves on the line, ask questions, seek feedback, report mistakes and problems or propose a new idea without fearing negative consequences to themselves, their job or their career. A psychologically safe and healthy organization actively promotes emotional well-being among workers while taking all reasonable steps to minimize threats to worker mental health.
An organization with good psychological protection can state:
- It is committed to minimizing unnecessary stress at work.
- Leaders care about workers’ emotional well-being.
- It attempts to prevent harm to workers from harassment, bullying, discrimination, violence or stigma.
- Workers would describe the workplace as being psychologically healthy.
- It deals effectively with situations that can threaten or harm workers (harassment, bullying, discrimination, violence, stigma, etc.).
Why is psychological protection important?
When workers are psychologically protected, they show greater job satisfaction, enhanced team learning and improved performance. Workers are more likely to speak up, become involved, have increased morale and are less likely to experience stress-related illnesses. Psychologically protected workplaces also experience fewer grievances, conflicts and liability risks.
When workers are not psychologically safe, they experience demoralization, a sense of threat, disengagement and strain. Workplace conditions are seen as unclear and unpredictable. The organization is at a much greater threat from costly and potentially crippling, legal and regulatory risk. This can, in turn, ruin shareholder, consumer and public confidence in the organization.
FAQs
Action
Next steps: Ensuring employees’ psychological protection
Objective
Benefits
Reflection Questions
