Long title: Protocol for evaluating a Consultation for Suffering at work in French-speaking Switzerland (original) (raw)

Treating social suffering? Work-related suffering and its psychotherapeutic re/interpretation

This paper examines how psychotherapists deal with social suffering in its work-related forms. Based on the results of a qualitative empirical study in psychosomatic hospitals in Germany, I show how psychotherapy can lead to a normalization of overburdening demands at work, and ultimately a de-thematization of social factors. I argue that psychotherapists transform social suffering into suffering related to the self by re/interpreting the links to society that figure in the patients’ subjective theories of illness. The reason for this transformation lies in the logic of the profession necessary to legitimate the claim that the patients’ suffering falls within the purview of psychotherapy. Therapists have to disregard ‘the social’ in this manner since there are no medical diagnostic tools that would explicitly refer to work. The result of this professional re/interpretation is a form of therapy that medicalizes and personalizes social suffering, thereby intensifying, rather than tempering, a self-referentiality on the side of patients that is forgetful of society and already weighs on the individuals seeking treatment. To develop this argument, the dimension of work and its significance for psychotherapeutic etiology and diagnosis is considered. The study used and its results are explicated then in terms of three strategies of re/interpretation. Finally, the social-theoretical implications of this re/interpretation are discussed.

Association of Working Conditions with Self-Reported Work-Related Symptoms: Results from the Swiss Dataset of the European Working Conditions Survey

Working conditions are important determinants of health. The aims of this article are to 1) identify working conditions and work characteristics that are associated with workers' perceptions that their work is harmful to their health and 2) identify with what symptoms these working conditions are associated. We used the Swiss dataset from the 2005 edition of the European Working Conditions Survey. The dependent variable was based on the question "Does your work affect your health?". Logistic regression was used to identify a set of vari-ables collectively associated with self-reported work-related adverse health effects. A total of 330 (32%) participants reported having their health affected by work. The most frequent symptoms included backache (17.1%), muscular pains (13.1%), stress (18.3%) and overall fatigue (11.7%). Scores for self-reported exposure to physicochemical risks, postural and physical risks, high work demand, and low social support were all significantl...

The psychodynamic clinic and the analysis of suffering at work

The main objective of this reflection article is to present some basic ideas about the real, symbolic and imaginary possibilities of a psychodynamic clinic of work as a perspective of analysis of the subjective experience of suffering in contemporary work from the proposal of the French psychoanalyst Christophe Dejours, in order to contribute to the conceptual understanding and practical intervention of subjective suffering in work contexts.