MediLexicon Logo
MediLexicon Logo
Abbreviations        Abbrev Definitions        Dictionary        ICD9 Codes        Equipment        Hospitals        Drugs        More..
  

Useful Websites

Global Translations
Medical and Clinical Translation

specialistinfo.com
Details of over 40,000 UK Specialists and over 42,000 GPs

Global RPH
medical software

Doctors Lounge
Ask a Doctor and Disease Information

Health News
from Medical News Today.

MRCP 1 Revision
123 Doc medical courses for junior doctors.

CoreyNahman
pharmaceutical news daily

Hospital Search
Worldwide hospital database, search by country or keyword.

Metric Conversions
The Converter Site - unit conversion tool.
headlines news headlines   email email to a friend   printer printer friendly   newsletter sign up to newsletter  

Swedish Study Finds Poor Leadership Poses A Health Risk At Work

Main Category: Public Health

Article Date: 03 Nov 2009

Perceived poor managerial leadership increases not only the amount of sick leave taken at a workplace, but also the risk of sickness amongst employees later on in life. The longer a person has had a "poorer" manager, the higher his or her risk of for example suffering a heart attack within a ten-year period, according to a new thesis from the Swedish medical university Karolinska Institutet.

The recently submitted thesis is based on data from almost 20,000 employees in Sweden, Finland, Germany, Poland and Italy, working in a range of fields, such as the forest or hotel industries. Some of the studies also included a representative selection of Sweden's entire working population and industries in the Stockholm region. The researchers compared levels of self-rated stress, health, sick leave and emotional exhaustion with how subjects perceived their managers' leadership in terms of certain positive and negative criteria, such as inspirational, supportive and good at delegating or authoritarian, dishonest and distant.

The researchers also looked at the effects of managerial leadership in relation to whether employees change jobs, quit due to poor health, or become unemployed. One of the studies examined the correlation between how employees rate their managers' leadership and the risk of their developing serious cardiovascular disease later in life. They discovered that male residents of the Stockholm area ran a 25 per cent greater risk of suffering myocardial infarction during the ten-year follow-up period if they had expressed displeasure with their managers at the start of the study. Moreover, the level of risk increased more sharply with time of employment for subjects that reported "poorer" leadership.

Another result presented in the thesis is that Swedish men and women who rated their managers as inspirational, positive and enthusiastic also reported less short-term sick leave. This correlation was independent of their self-rated general health.

"In several of the studies, we controlled for a number of conceivable competing causes of the negative health results, but failed to find anything," says Anna Nyberg, postgraduate at the Department of Public Health Sciences. "The bottom line is that our results show that there's a relationship between how employees find their managers and how they feel, physically and mentally, and not just while at work but also later in life."

Doctoral thesis: The Impact of Managerial Leadership on Stress and Health Among Employees, Anna Nyberg, Department of Public Health Sciences. Supervisor: Professor Töres Theorell of Stockholm University's Stress Research Institute. The project was conducted with funding from FAS.

Read thesis: http://diss.kib.ki.se/2009/978-91-7409-614-9/

Source: Katarina Sternudd
Karolinska Institutet

Original article posted on Medical News Today.
Articles not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today

Medical News Today publishes the latest health news and health videos for consumers and health professionals. It has a searchable archive of over 100,000 health news articles.





For any corrections of factual information, or to contact the editors please use our feedback form.
Send your press releases to








free web search box


pda medical dictionary
pda software - $15

PDA Medical Dictionary

only $15

Take MediLexicon's abbreviations search with you where-ever you go with our PDA software. As an extra, this software is available with an extra medical dictionary...

>> Click here for more on the PDA Medical Dictionary <<




add to google

Add our searches to your Google homepage.

Add to Google

The 60 seconds challenge: Add these searches to your Google homepage within 60 seconds - simply click here and follow these instructions


Receive the latest medical news on your Google homepage.

Add to Google

The 60 seconds challenge: Receive the latest medical news on your Google homepage within 60 seconds - simply click here and follow these instructions





Privacy Policy   |    Disclaimer      

MediLexicon International Ltd, UK Office: +44 (0) 1625 415 347
MediLexicon International Ltd © 2009 All rights reserved.