Posts Tagged bullies

Workplace Bullying a Public Health Issue

 Read deeply into today’s article in The Washington Post:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/18/AR2008041802324.html

Workplace bullying is mentioned underneath the schoolyard bullying issue that headlines the article. It brings home the situation that articles in California and elsewhere have about suicide, cancer and heart attack risk, etc.

During the past two decades, bullying has been linked to hundreds of deaths worldwide, underscoring the need to address this urgent public health issue.” and

“Maryland should look at public policy strategies that involve the participation of public health officials to promote community understanding of the health problems linked to bullying, provide guidelines for the detection of health problems and work with school authorities to conduct periodic assessments of the prevalence of bullying. Community partnerships are essential to promote understanding about bullying and to advocate for its prevention.”

I believe this is only the second mention in The Washington Post of workplace bullying. The other, concerning the recent Canadian study was:

 

 Federal legislation is needed to protect federal workers; state legislation is need to protect state employees and private employees. I hope the Post will have that influence.

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Bullying Comes to a Workplace Near You

There are a couple of stories in workplace bullying news today that merit attention. There is a great interview with Dr. Gary Namie of the Workplace Bullying Institute. You can see the whole article here, but I have excerpted highlights:


Previewing his “Workplace Bullying — the New Harassment” presentation, Namie agreed to do a Q & A with the Sioux City Journal.

Sioux City Journal: “Why is workplace bullying considered a new sort of harassment? Hasn’t it been going on forever?”

Namie: “Yes it has, but it’s been like a dirty little secret. People know that sexual harassment is illegal but bullying is four times as prevalent. (Bullying) has been a silent epidemic because people felt they couldn’t talk about it and because they knew employers would look the other way and do nothing about it. The WBI has been working with state legislatures and the courts in an attempt to effect anti-bullying state laws. We’ve also been working with progressive businesses to recognize its impact on their employees.”

Journal: “What’s the difference between acceptable, routine conduct versus abusive bullying?

Namie: “Workplace bullying doesn’t mean merely being rude to a subordinate. The workplace bully publicly humiliates a co-worker, deliberately sabotages a co-worker’s career, verbally threatens, or even physically threatens the co-worker. The impact on the bullied co-worker can range from anxiety, depression, all the way up to Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).”

Journal: “Why is workplace bullying prevalent among educators in schools?”

Namie: “The kind of person drawn to teaching wants to develop and educate people. That person may be a nurturing type of person who’d rather turn the other cheek than confront the bully. Everything that makes that person a good teacher also makes them an easy mark for a narcissistic, egotistical bully.”

Journal: “What impact does it have on students?”

Namie: “The impact is great. Forty-five percent of the people who experience bullying also experience stress-related health complications. This increases the rate of absenteeism which impacts the teacher’s ability to teach your child. A good teacher may even decide the work isn’t worthwhile because of the abuse. How can a teacher tell a student that it’s wrong bullying others if it happens to the teacher? How much credibility will this teacher have with the student?

Another article also appeared in the The Ledger: http://www.theledger.com/article/20080414/NEWS/804140393/1326.

The media is learning that this is an epidemic problem, with nearly 54 million people being bullied in their workplaces. The Indiana Supreme Court (see my post below) is the only “law” that exists out there acknowledging workplace bullying as a tort, a personal injury.

It’s important that women and racial minorities have protection from discrimination and harassment. But there is bullying that happens to all people in the workplace and we need status blind legislation for that–doesn’t matter if you are a man or woman, of any color or ethnicity or religion. Because anyone can bullied.

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Indiana Supreme Court Calls Workplace Bully to Account!

The Indiana Supreme Court has ruled that workplace bullying can be intentional infliction of emotional distress. While a state supreme court ruling is binding precedent only on that state’s courts, other states often use such decisions to inform their own legal thinking. For a complete overview of this case’s history, see http://bullyinginstitute.org/education/indianacase.html.

To read the entire decision: http://www.in.gov/judiciary/opinions/pdf/04080801bd.pdf.

The verdict has, of course, received media attention. http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080409/BUSINESS/804090417.

The comment section is quite revealing. There are the healthy workplace advocates and bullied people who have spoken up, but there are also the comments that call targets whiners, wimps, etc., as if being yelled at and having fists put in one’s face were “normal” workplace behavior. We all know it should not be, and in some ways, this is a cry for civilization to win out over barbarism.

For some people, anyone who sues is a crybaby; any jury is a pathetic bunch of morons; any appellate court or group of lawyers are out to get doctors. But the truth is so clear. Targets of bullying experience the health-harming effects of abuse; juries are people like us who know a bully when they see one and are tired of this behavior; lawyers and jurists are people who can choose to do the right thing and invoke the law to do what it is supposed to do: right wrongs!

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