Fortune | FORTUNE 2024年11月08日
Gen Z is more likely to call in sick to work than Gen Xers 20 years their senior thanks to a mental health crisis ‘turbocharged’ by young women
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英国年轻一代(Gen Z)正经历着前所未有的心理健康危机,抑郁和焦虑等常见精神疾病的患病率显著上升,导致他们比年长20岁的X一代更容易请病假。研究发现,女性和大学生群体受影响尤为严重,这与日益激烈的教育环境和社交媒体使用等因素有关。心理健康问题不仅影响年轻人的工作表现,还加剧了职场代际差异,导致生产力下降,并对英国经济造成巨大损失。专家呼吁企业重视员工心理健康,培养具备心理健康意识的管理者,以改善年轻一代的职场体验和未来发展。

🤔 Gen Z的心理健康问题日益严重:18-24岁年轻人中超过三分之一患有常见精神疾病(CMD),如抑郁症、焦虑症和双相情感障碍,且女性患病率远高于男性。

💼 职场缺勤率上升:过去十年,因病缺勤的年轻人数量翻倍,且年轻人在工作中因病缺勤的概率已超过年长20岁的人群,导致职场代际差异加剧。

📉 工作效率下降:研究表明,Gen Z员工更容易在低薪工作中工作,且自评工作效率低下,这与年轻员工和年长管理者之间的沟通不畅有关。

🎓 大学成心理健康问题“温床”:大学生的心理健康问题日益突出,三分之五的学生患有精神疾病,这与日益激烈的教育环境和对高薪工作的追求有关。

📱 智能手机使用与心理健康:研究表明,智能手机的使用与心理健康水平下降存在关联,青少年和年轻女性受影响最为严重。

The stresses of adapting to work after your college years have been a universal struggle, marred by new routines, unsatisfying jobs, and the loss of your social life. But new research suggests it’s increasingly becoming a generational and gender-based struggle too.A troubling rise in the number of young people in the U.K. reporting mental health difficulties like depression and anxiety means they are now more likely to call in sick than aging Gen Xers who are 20 years their senior, in a surprising turnaround for historic wellness trends. That growing mental health crisis is beginning to have a major impact on Gen Z employees’ career prospects, according to research by the think tank Resolution Foundation (RF).Gen Z now getting sicker than 40-year-oldsResearch from the RF finds that more than a third of young people aged 18 to 24 suffer from what is described as a “common mental disorder,” (CMD) like depression, anxiety, or bipolar disorder. The figure is well above the 24% of young people in 2000 who lived with a CMD.That jump has been “turbocharged” by a mental health crisis among women. Two out of five women in the U.K. are likely to report a CMD, compared with a quarter of men. While there are theories about the causes of this surge, from the loss of vital public services to the falling stigma around talking about mental health, what can’t be debated is the real-world impacts of increasing instances of poor mental well-being.RF analysis has found that the number of young people taking time off work due to ill health has doubled in the last decade. The effects on work outcomes are becoming clear. People living with mental health difficulties are more likely to be working in low-paid jobs compared with their healthier colleagues.The most worrying part of that trend for policymakers is that it is creating previously unheard-of generational dynamics. For example, young people are now more likely to be absent from work because of illness than people who are 20 years older.That generational divide is leading to workplace schisms that are hurting productivity. A study by the London School of Economics and consulting firm Protiviti found more than a third of Gen Z employees were self-reporting themselves as being unproductive. The researchers put the cause of this low productivity down to a communication breakdown between young workers and their older managers. It’s also impacting the U.K. economy. Research from health insurer Vitality found Gen X and millennial workers were missing the equivalent of one day of work every week due to poor mental health. Vitality estimated this was costing the British economy £138 billion ($176 billion) per year.“Youth worklessness due to ill health is a real and growing trend; it is worrying that young people in their early 20s, just embarking on their adult life, are more likely to be out of work due to ill health than those in their early 40s,” RF researchers said. Universities becoming ‘hotbeds’ for mental health issuesAccording to the RF, young Gen Xers surveyed in 2000 had the lowest proportion of CMD cases on record.And while it might be easy to blame the recent rise on the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, the issues are more deep-seated and the culmination of longer-running trends.One of them is an increasingly stressful education environment. The RF says universities have become “hotbeds” for mental health problems. Past research shows three out of five students are living with a mental health disorder.At the same time, research shows that a college education remains people’s best chance of landing higher-paid careers, creating a double-edged sword where young people increasingly run the gamut of risking their mental health for better job outcomes.Students also receive more mental health support from their universities, compared with non-university students who have fewer options to seek out support. Gen Z women most affectedRF’s research made a striking realization that young women are now 1.6 times more likely than men to take time off work due to ill health. It reversed a trend of young men taking more time off in the 2010s, and the dial has only shifted thanks to a steep rise in female illness in the last couple of years.Gen Z women are consistently reported as the most likely to be suffering from mental health disorders. Psychologist Jean Twenge, Ph.D., told Fortune last year there is a clear correlation between the rise of smartphone use and declining levels of mental health.Teenagers hitting college age report the biggest instances of poor mental health. Nearly a third of females ages 17–19 have a probable mental disorder, according to the RF.The think tank urged sectors employing large numbers of young people to spearhead initiatives to hire more “mental-health aware” managers to improve the outcomes of tomorrow’s leaders.

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Gen Z 心理健康 职场倦怠 代际差异 精神疾病
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