远程工作视频会议:员工的情绪疲惫和更大的福祉实践

Betty J Johnson, J. Beth Mabry
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引用次数: 5

摘要

会议科学文献为理解工作场所会议是压力的来源提供了基础。然而,在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,当组织迅速采用视频会议进行远程办公时,一种新的工作压力形式“缩放疲劳”迅速出现。我们试图了解员工对视频会议体验的看法,以及这些看法与他们的情绪疲惫感之间的关系。此外,我们很好奇,员工们会认为哪些方法可以让视频会议不那么累人、更有益。这些见解可以为领导者和组织提供实用的解决方案,以减少与视频会议相关的压力和由此产生的情绪疲劳。这项混合方法研究基于2020年8月从总部位于美国的各大公司的345名员工中收集的调查数据,提供了与视频会议压力相关的员工体验的证据。定量和定性结果表明,员工在心理上被视频会议负荷所耗尽,工作所需的超负荷,视频会议对他们不利,视频会议与履行其他工作职责和履行家庭责任所需的时间和精力相冲突,以及感知到的表面行为的必要性。数据显示,这些因素以情绪衰竭的形式与幸福感下降有关。参与者的定性反应证实了结果,并提出了与规划和包容以及支持性互动相关的支持性实践,这些支持性实践可以缓解视频会议的疲惫。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Remote work video meetings: Workers’ emotional exhaustion and practices for greater well-being
Meeting science literature provides a foundation for understanding workplace meetings as a source of stress. However, a new form of worker stress, “Zoom fatigue,” quickly emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic when organizations rapidly adopted video meetings for remote work-from-home. We sought to understand workers’ perceptions about video meeting experiences and how they relate to their sense of emotional exhaustion. Additionally, we were curious about what workers might see as ways to make video meetings less tiring and more beneficial. These insights could inform practical solutions for leaders and organizations to reduce the stress and resulting emotional fatigue related to video meetings. This mixed-methods study, based on survey data collected in August 2020 from 345 workers at a cross-section of U.S.-headquartered organizations, provides evidence of worker experiences related to video meeting stress. The quantitative and qualitative results show that workers feel psychologically depleted by video meeting load, an excess of load needed to do their job, video meetings that are not beneficial to them, video meetings that conflict with the time and energy needed to perform their other job responsibilities and fulfill their home responsibilities, and the perceived necessity to surface act. The data show these factors relate to diminished well-being in the form of emotional exhaustion. Participants’ qualitative responses corroborate the results and suggest supportive practices related to planning and inclusion and supportive interaction that can ease video meeting exhaustion.
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