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Corporate
Mental Health
Mental
health problems among the corporate employees is noticed
to be high, due to high stress, work pressure, irregular
work timings, sleep deprivation, conflicts at work place,
high expectation of self, ambitious nature etc. People
can silently suffer from this problem without being
aware that they are having a reversible condition. A
person who faces low motivation suddenly may just be
having features of exhaustion or depression, a person
who avoids parties and travelling may have Social Anxiety
Disorder. In mental health many of the problems can
be treated and one need not withhold for fear of discrimination.
A
person's career growth is based on their work performance
for which the education, attitude, skills and performance.
The growth is centred on the skills a person can demonstrate
at work place; if a person has good public speaking
skill then they can do interesting presentations, then
this brings career advantage. If a person demonstrates
skills in managing people effectively however difficult
they are, then they grow in people oriented fields like
administration and marketing. If a person is mortally
scared of travelling even to a known destination, it
will paralyse him with restrictions.
Substance
abuse
Substance
abuse can be found in the form of daily drinking of
alcohol, taking tablets and intake of marijuana, heroin
and other substances to induce intoxication. This habit
can be formed out of social compulsions to drink in
parties and then it can become a devastating habit.
Similarly being adventurous in trying out drugs can
get them hooked on to it on a permanent basis. Those
who take such substance can also have underlying emotional
problems in terms of failures in their personal life,
career or some major disappointment.
Psychological
problems
Self-esteem
is another major issue, which influences a person's
behaviour and performance. A person with very mediocre
capabilities can think very high and mighty about self.
If a person develops such superior self esteem then
they can become dysfunctional as they will start feeling
superior over others, will tend to have a condescending
attitude towards the juniors and colleagues, will be
over sensitive and can also be very explosive with their
expressions. They will also be oblivious towards the
damage they do to others and as to how others feel about
their explosive expressions. On the other hand a person
with low self-esteem can be very docile and be an under
performer as he would constantly devalue himself and
consider to be incompetent. This can lead to underperformance
by the person, which would affect the person and also
the company.
If
a rude superior is shouting on top of his voice, cause
he is not able to deal with the situation, what the
subordinate does will be detrimental to his personality.
If the subordinate on the first instance of screaming,
responds assertively then the behaviour of verbal abuse
may diminish, on the other hand if the subordinate takes
all the abuse quietly then the abuser will feel encouraged
to repeat such undesirable behaviour. Accepting to perform
an unfamiliar work cause of the inhibition to say 'No'
just to satisfy the superior for the moment and then
tossing themselves for blindly accepting to perform
the work would be habitual for someone with lack of
assertiveness. They will also not be able to perform
the work leading to disappointment with themselves and
to the people who had delegated the work. In an effort
to please a person they will end up causing loss of
time and irritation about the incomplete work.
'All
work and no play can make Jack a dull boy' similarly
those who keep scheduling tasks without taking a break
and relaxing can experience 'burnout'; a condition in
which they get emotionally and physically exhausted.
Psychiatric
problems
Corporate
staff can experience psychiatric problems secondary
to various life situations and personal problems. The
common types of psychiatric conditions that affect corporate
staff are depression, anxiety, somatisation and obsessive-compulsive
disorder. In anxiety disorder the person will have an
unknown fear or fear of some particular situation like
making a presentation or travel. The anxiety can cause
palpitation tremors, sweating and make the person loose
his ability to think rationally. The anxiety can be
caused by an irrational fear. In depression the person
will experience lack of interest, low mood and increase
or decrease in appetite and sexual drive. In obsessive-compulsive
disorder the person inspite of knowing the futility,
will keep repeatedly doing things like washing, hoarding
useless objects, keep washing hands or be totally preoccupied
with the orderliness and neatness of the place. Similarly
a person can also develop symptoms of a medical illness
without actually having the medical problem or be over
concerned about their general physical health.
Treatment
Mental
Health problems are treated with psychiatric medication,
counselling and Psychotherapy. Meeting a psychotherapist
and discussing the symptoms and real life situation
will enable the therapist to diagnose the nature of
the problem. Some of the mental health problems can
be overcome by a simple work up on the personality or
on coping skills of the person. Some psychological problems
and psychiatric problems may require specific intense
psychotherapy over a period of three months or so, depending
upon the severity of the illness.
Many
workshops and skills development programmes are available
nowadays, but those with low self-esteem and those not
comfortable with groups may not benefit from such workshops.
They may require individual attention in a customised
form in therapy sessions; also they may perform better
as individuals rather than in groups.
Cognitive
Behaviour Therapy is a specialised form of counselling
and psychotherapy, to help patients overcome their emotional
problems, correct faulty process in thinking, feeling
and behaviour. Patients can develop illogical thoughts
faulty way of thinking, (ex: I am good for nothing,
others usually do not respect me etc). Such faulty thought
patterns can provoke intense negative emotions. Similarly
out of fear of failure they can avoid doing certain
activity, which can lead to problems in their life.
(Ex; public speaking, avoiding exams)
The
therapist enables the person to recognise such patterns
of distorted thinking and dysfunctional behaviour. The
therapist alters distorted thoughts and dysfunctional
behaviours using systematic discussion and carefully
structured cognitive and behavioural assignments. The
patient's work in a collaborative relationship with
the therapist to identify problems and strategies to
overcome the problem.
Initially
a very detailed assessment is made about the problem
the person is facing, their personality, their strengths
and weakness. The central principle of cognitive-behavioural
assessment is the ways in which an individual behaves
are determined by immediate situations, thought process,
mood and the individual's interpretations of them.
In
Cognitive Behavioural approach the therapist aims to
help the person to develop skills to overcome the present
problem. The progress of the therapy directly depends
on the way patient performs the assignments, stays committed
to the therapeutic goals and his efforts in working
out various strategies. The cognitive and behavioural
exercises would be like challenging the automatic thoughts
that he/she is no good or is deficient in many ways
compared to others etc The patient is expected to participate
actively by collecting information, giving feedback
on the effectiveness of techniques, and making suggestions
about new strategies.
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