Summary: Research from the Indiana University Kelley School of Business has found that workplace mistreatment disproportionately impacts Black employees, leading to significantly higher rates of sleep loss and depression compared to white employees. The study suggests that Black employees are more likely to attribute mistreatment to racial prejudice, which exacerbates the negative effects on their mental and physical health. The researchers emphasize the need for organizations to create more inclusive workplaces that address and prevent such mistreatment to protect the well-being of their employees.
Key Takeaways:
- Disproportionate Impact on Black Employees: Black employees who experience workplace mistreatment experience significantly greater sleep loss and higher rates of depression compared to their white colleagues, with some losing up to 100 minutes of sleep per night.
- Racial Attribution of Mistreatment: The study found that Black employees are more likely to attribute mistreatment to racial prejudice, which deepens the psychological impact and makes it harder to dismiss the negative experiences.
- Call for Inclusive Workplaces: The researchers highlight the importance of creating inclusive workplaces that go beyond diversity initiatives, focusing on reducing mistreatment and fostering a culture of respect and collegiality to protect the well-being of all employees.
Workplace mistreatment results in higher rates of depression and sleep loss in Black employees than white employees, according to research from the Indiana University Kelley School of Business.
While previous research has shown a link between workplace mistreatment and depression, it has been unclear whether all employees are affected the same way or whether workers from marginalized groups are more susceptible to its negative consequences.
Kelley management professors Erik Gonzalez-Mulé, PhD, and Ernest H. O’Boyle, PhD, and former doctoral student Ji Woon Ryu found that Black employees “are more likely to attribute experienced workplace mistreatment to racial prejudice and make a pessimistic attribution than whites.”
Their findings appear in the Journal of Applied Psychology.
“Improving the health and well-being of employees has become an increasingly important concern for organizations,” says Ryu, the corresponding author and an assistant professor of management at Portland State University who earned her doctorate from Kelley in 2022, in a release. “For example, the monetary cost of some mental health problems, such as depression, can cost organizations billions of dollars via absenteeism and turnover.”
Sleep Loss Following Workplace Mistreatment
The Kelley School researchers based their findings on the results of two studies. The first study involved a large sample of publicly available data. Months after taking an initial survey, a subset of participants in the publicly available study also completed a clinical depression questionnaire, while others completed nightly self-report measures of sleep quality and wore a sleep-monitoring device to measure sleep quantity.
The researchers found that workplace mistreatment was related to depression and sleep quantity, but only for Black employees.
Black employees facing mistreatment were projected to get 100 fewer minutes of sleep per night compared to either white people—who were or were not experiencing mistreatment—or other Black people not facing mistreatment.
Workplace Mistreatment and Depression
In the second study, the researchers recruited about 500 online participants who were instructed to recall an instance when they felt mistreated by a coworker or a boss.
Black people were more likely to attribute that mistreatment to their race, something that is an enduring, critical aspect of one’s identity, which in turn resulted in higher rates of depression. For white employees, mistreatment was less likely to be attributed to race and could more easily be “shaken off,” for example, by thinking that the offending person was “just a jerk.”
Mistreated Black employees—compared to mistreated white employees—were nearly eight times more likely to perceive prejudice attributed to their race.
“Our findings are not intended to put the onus on Black employees for being too sensitive, but to inform organizations that mistreatment is experienced within the context of one’s identity,” says Gonzalez-Mulé, Kelley School professor and chair of management and entrepreneurship and the Randall L. Tobias Chair in Leadership, in a release. “Organizations must strive to create an inclusive workplace for their Black employees and should find ways to reduce workplace mistreatment, for example, by implementing accountability measures or encouraging bystander intervention.”
Workplace Inclusion
In their paper, Ryu, Gonzalez-Mulé, and O’Boyle, who is the Dale M. Coleman Chair in Management at Kelley, say that organizations may need to go beyond simply promoting diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging as business goals.
“Many of them have predominantly focused on the diversity aspect, with most attention paid to simply staffing a more diverse workplace,” they write. “We encourage managers to heed the oft-quoted line, that ‘Diversity is being invited to the party; inclusion is being asked to dance.’ Workplace mistreatment is the antithesis of inclusiveness even if consistently applied across racial lines.
“By creating an organizational culture where respect and collegiality are the norm and members of all racial groups are equally valued, organizations could reduce the likelihood of mistreatment being attributed to an unalterable aspect of one’s identity and ultimately mitigate the risk of depression.”
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