Mental Health at Work: Neuroscience, Corporate Culture, and the Economics of Well-being
Mental health at the workplace has ceased to be an individual employee's concern and has become a critical factor in organizational efficiency, economic sustainability, and business ethical responsibility. Its understanding has evolved from the absence of clinical disorders to a state of well-being where a person realizes their potential, copes with stress, and works productively.
Neurobiology and Psychophysiology of the Work Environment
The modern work environment constantly affects the limbic system and the prefrontal cortex of the brain. Key stressors activate the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, leading to chronically elevated levels of cortisol.
Factors causing neurobiological imbalance:
Chronic uncertainty and lack of control (the learned helplessness phenomenon) suppress the activity of the prefrontal cortex, responsible for planning and decision-making, and increase the activity of the amygdala, the center of fear.
Digital overload and multitasking. Constant shifting of attention exhausts neurotransmitter systems, reducing cognitive functions and increasing irritability. Stanford University research shows that multitaskers are worse at filtering information and demonstrate lower productivity.
Social isolation and toxic relationships. Negative social interactions increase the level of inflammatory cytokines in the body, which correlates with the development of depression.
Interesting fact: A study conducted at the University of California, Berkeley, found that leaders with a high level of emotional intelligence contribute to a decrease in cortisol levels among their subordinates and increase their level of oxytocin ("the hormone of trust"), creating a neurobiological foundation for psychological safety.
Organizational Determinants of Mental Health
According to WHO and Gallup Institute models, key risks and protective factors lie in the structure of work:
Risks (psychos ...
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