Source avec lien : Occupational and Environmental Medicine, (En ligne). 10.1136/oemed-2022-108287
Dans ce numéro de la revue Occupational and Environmental Medicine , Blindow et ses collègues présentent une étude méthodologiquement solide qui répond à certaines des lacunes de la littérature. Reconnaissant la question plus large du harcèlement sexiste au travail, l’étude définit le harcèlement sexuel fondé sur le sexe (c’est-à-dire les avances non désirées et les remarques offensantes de nature sexuelle) et le harcèlement non sexuel (c’est-à-dire les infractions sexistes non sexualisées et les expressions de manque de respect que les personnes concernées perçoivent comme étant fondées sur leur sexe) comme deux facteurs de stress conceptuellement différents qui peuvent avoir une incidence sur le risque de développer un trouble mental chez les femmes et les hommes.
Since it was recognised as a larger sociolegal phenomenon in the 1970s, a growing body of research suggests that sexual harassment at work, defined as unwanted conduct that has the purpose or effect of being intimidating, hostile, degrading, humiliating or offensive, has widespread negative consequences for employees, organisations and society at large.1 2 Because sexual harassment disproportionately affects women, occupational health research has focused on this specific facet of gender harassment and its impact on women’s well-being and health,3 while few studies have quantified the possible negative impact of sexual harassment directed at men.2 Furthermore, recent definitions and research offer greater recognition of various forms of gender-based harassment not limited to sexuality.2 4 In this issue of Occupational and Environmental Medicine , Blindow and coworkers5 provide a methodologically sound study that addresses some of the mentioned shortcomings in the literature. Recognising the larger issue of gender harassment at work, the study defines gender-based sexual harassment (ie, unwanted advances and offensive remarks of a sexual nature) and non-sexual harassment (ie, non-sexualising sexist offences and expressions of disrespect that the affected perceived as based on their gender) as two conceptually different stressors that can have a bearing on the risk of developing a mental disorder among both women and men. Importantly, from an occupational health perspective, the available evidence to support the inference of a possible causal association between different aspects of gender harassment and mental health is limited; with …