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Issue title: Sweden
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Härenstam, Annika; | the MOA Research Group,
Affiliations: National Institute for Working Life, SE 113 91 Stockholm, Sweden | Division of Occupational Health, Department of Public Health Science, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm. E-mail: annika.harenstam@arbetslivsinstitutet.se
Abstract: This article has a two-fold purpose. First, it provides an explanation for the increase in occupational stress and sick leaves in Sweden in terms of the structural and organizational conditions. Second, it discusses measures that address these issues. Results of a study of 72 establishments are presented. The study investigated these establishments at both the organizational and individual employee level. It examined management strategies and working conditions in the establishments, classifying these elements by type of operations and company position. Both classifications point to differences in how work is organized and in working conditions. The results indicate that management technologies distribute risks between segments of the labor market, thus, also between different groups of the labor force. The developments were most favorable in high tech and knowledge-based operations. The situation was least favorable in labor-intensive services and, the most negative development had taken place in human services. Establishments serving as contractors appeared to organize their work differently from those with core activities. Working conditions in contracting businesses were particularly problematic. Since organizational changes work differently from one company to the next, there is a need to develop a variety of strategies for enacting change in the work environment. This article proposes strategies for different segments of the labor market. These strategies are adapted to the particular problems facing each segment.
Keywords: management technologies, organizational changes, prevention, sick leave rates, working conditions, work environment measures
Journal: Work, vol. 24, no. 3, pp. 261-277, 2005
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