Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part One Packaging Stress
- Part Two Trauma and Acute Stress
- Part Three War
- Part Four Work
- 7 Making Sense of Workplace Fear: The Role of Physicians, Psychiatrists, and Labor in Reframing Occupational Strain in Industrial Britain, ca. 1850–1970
- 8 Work, Stress, and Depression: The Emerging Psychiatric Science of Work in Contemporary Japan
- Part Five Managing Stress
- Part Six Surveilling Stress
- List of Contributors
- Index
8 - Work, Stress, and Depression: The Emerging Psychiatric Science of Work in Contemporary Japan
from Part Four - Work
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 April 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part One Packaging Stress
- Part Two Trauma and Acute Stress
- Part Three War
- Part Four Work
- 7 Making Sense of Workplace Fear: The Role of Physicians, Psychiatrists, and Labor in Reframing Occupational Strain in Industrial Britain, ca. 1850–1970
- 8 Work, Stress, and Depression: The Emerging Psychiatric Science of Work in Contemporary Japan
- Part Five Managing Stress
- Part Six Surveilling Stress
- List of Contributors
- Index
Summary
Work, Stress, and Depression
In Japan, amid a prolonged economic recession since the 1990s, psychiatry has suddenly gained popular appeal by depicting depression as a quintessential illness of stress. Concerns about stress-induced depression have heightened after an epoch-making lawsuit in 2000, in which the Supreme Court ordered Dentsū, Japan's biggest advertising agency, to pay to the family of a deceased employee the highest amount ever to be paid for a worker's death in this country. The court determined that the employee was driven to suicide because of depression, which had been caused by chronic work stress. As the rising discourse about overwork depression coincided with an aggressive campaign for new antidepressants beginning in the late 1990s, a stress-based notion of depression quickly permeated Japanese society, turning it into one of the most talked-about illnesses in its recent history. In response to legal disputes and the rising number of the depressed particularly in the workplace, the government has made changes in labor policy to address the psychopathology of work. Most notable in this regard is the creation of Stress Evaluation Tables, which has done much to firmly establish psychological stress in the workplace as a legitimate reason for economic compensation.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Stress, Shock, and Adaptation in the Twentieth Century , pp. 222 - 238Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2014