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Depression more severe in those who are sexually harassed by co-workers

Researchers from National Research Center for Work Environment (NRCWE) in Denmark found that compared to employees not exposed to sexual harassment, those harassed by clients or customers scored 2.05 points higher on the Major Depression Inventory (MDI).

Depression more severe in those who are sexually harassed by co-workers (Representational image)

New Delhi: Workplace sexual harassment is a rising concern around the world. Many women have recently come out in the open with their experiences, a move which has encouraged many others to do the same, thus compelling strict action against the culprits.

While sexual harassment – irrespective of time, place or gender – is considered a huge crime, not much is spoken about how it affects the mental health of the person who is at the receiving end.

A study has now found, that people who are sexually harassed by their work colleagues are at a risk of developing more severe symptoms of depression than those who experience harassment by clients or customers.

Researchers from National Research Center for Work Environment (NRCWE) in Denmark found that compared to employees not exposed to sexual harassment, those harassed by clients or customers scored 2.05 points higher on the Major Depression Inventory (MDI).

MDI is a self-report mood questionnaire that generates a diagnosis of depression together with an estimate of symptom severity. Scores on the MDI range from 20 for minor depression to 30 or more for major depression.

Employees harassed by a colleague, supervisor or subordinate scored 2.45 points higher compared to employees who had experienced sexual harassment by clients or customers, according to the study published in the journal BMC Public Health.

Researchers noted that women were more likely to be exposed than men, with 169 out of 4,116 women reporting sexual harassment by clients or customers compared to 11 out of 3,487 men, and 48 women reporting sexual harassment by colleagues compared to 31 men.

Participants employed in care work were more often exposed to sexual harassment by clients or customers – 152 out of 2,191 (6.9 percent) – than participants employed in other occupational groups such as education, service or industrial work, researchers said.

"Our findings suggest that sexual harassment from clients or customers has adverse consequences and should not be normalised or ignored," said Ida Elisabeth Huitfeldt Madsen from NRCWE.

"In this study we found that sexual harassment from clients or customers, which is more prevalent than harassment from other employees, is associated with an increased level of depressive symptoms," Madsen said.

This is important as some workplaces, for example in person-related work like care work or social work, may have an attitude that dealing with sexual harassment by clients or customers is 'part of the job', researchers said.

(With PTI inputs)

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