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Employment and Workplace Issues

You are here: Archive / Terms / Topics / Business and Industry / Employment and Workplace Issues / Page 3

Employment and Workplace Issues Sub-categories:

  • Employment (30)
  • Unemployment (10)
  • Work (22)
Medical Notes: Week of May 16, 2021

Medical Notes: Week of May 16, 2021

>> May 16, 2021

A study showing that even Covid survivors who were never sick enough to be hospitalized have a 60 percent higher risk of death from other diseases. Then Most people assume that smoke from wildfires affects mostly the heart and lungs, but a new study finds that it increases the odds of eczema as well. And finally… more than a year after the first reports of …

topics: Anxiety and Depression| Behavioral Science| Business and Industry| Communication| Covid-19 Pandemic| Dermatology| Employment and Workplace Issues| Environmental Science and Climate Change| Gender and Identity| Internet and Social Media| Mental Health| Natural Disasters| News and Headlines| Social Science| Technology| Viruses| Wildfire| Women's Health
Covid And PTSD

Covid and PTSD

>> May 2, 2021

Studies show that as many as a third of people who were very ill with Covid-19 later develop PTSD. Caregivers and health care workers may be afflicted as well. An expert discusses how this develops and what people can do to get better.

topics: Behavioral Science| Business and Industry| Consumerism| Covid-19 Pandemic| Emergency Medicine and First Responders| Employment and Workplace Issues| Health Care| Mental Health| Physician Burnout| Prevention| Psychology and Psychiatry| Public Health| Public Health and Public Safety| Stress and Stress Management| Viruses
Giving Cash To The Homeless

Giving Cash to the Homeless

>> April 18, 2021

Homelessness continues to be a stubborn problem despite many well-intentioned programs. A new experimental study finds that giving homeless people thousands of dollars in cash helps get many of them off the streets for good, calling into question many assumptions about the homeless and how they got that way. Experts discuss the new program and its …

topics: Addiction| Alcohol Use and Abuse| Behavioral Science| Business and Industry| Economics| Economics and Finance| Employment and Workplace Issues| Environment| Environmental Science and Climate Change| Ethics| Homelessness and Housing| Infrastructure and Engineering| Philanthropy and Nonprofit Organizations| Philosophy and Ethics| Poverty| Public Health and Public Safety| Public Policy and Regulation| Research and Clinical Trials| Unemployment

Medical Notes: Week of April 4, 2021

>> April 4, 2021

One of the oldest drugs in the world, aspirin, may help prevent Covid-19 infections and make illnesses that do take place much less serious. Then, people with Crohn’s disease often have flare-ups. One reason those sores don’t heal—fungus in foods. And finally… bosses who demand that employees keep their noses to the grindstone may be hurting productivity.

topics: Business and Industry| Covid-19 Pandemic| Employment and Workplace Issues| News and Headlines| Nutrition and Diet| Productivity| Research and Clinical Trials| Science| Viruses
epilepsy myths - RHJ 22-11B

Epilepsy Myths (2021)

>> March 14, 2021

An award-winning writer who has epilepsy describes the discrimination faced by people with seizure disorders and dispels the many myths many people hold about them.

topics: Biology| Business and Industry| Disabilities| Discrimination and Racism| Economics and Finance| Employment and Workplace Issues| Fact or Fiction| Health Care| Implicit Bias| Myths| Public Health and Public Safety| Sleep| Stigma and Stereotypes| Unemployment
Covid’s Effect On Women In The Workplace

Covid’s Effect On Women in the Workplace

>> February 28, 2021

The Covid-19 pandemic has affected women’s employment much more dramatically than men, especially women of color.

topics: Business and Industry| Covid-19 Pandemic| Economics| Economics and Finance| Education| Employment| Employment and Workplace Issues| Gender and Identity| Labor and Wages| Public Health| Public Health and Public Safety| Public Policy and Regulation| Research and Clinical Trials| Unemployment| Viruses| Women's Health| Women's Issues
Exhaustion On The Covid Front Lines

Exhaustion on the Covid Front Lines

>> February 7, 2021

Healthcare workers in ER’s and ICU’s are in their 11th month of fighting Covid-19 and its exhaustion and depression. Two front line doctors describe how they’re managing to stay optimistic amid so much chaos, and how the vaccine has given them a goal keeping them afloat.

topics: Addiction| Behavioral Science| Business and Industry| Covid-19 Pandemic| Emergency Medicine and First Responders| Emergency Preparedness| Emergency Room| Employment| Employment and Workplace Issues| Health Care| Infectious Disease and Vaccination| Intensive Care Unit (ICU)| Mental Health| Prevention| Public Health| Public Health and Public Safety| Substance Abuse| Suicide| Viruses
Requiring Employees To Get Covid Vaccines

Requiring Employees To Get Covid Vaccines

>> January 17, 2021

Some Americans say there is no way they’ll get a Covid-19 vaccine, yet some may have no choice if they want to keep their jobs.

topics: Business and Industry| Constitutional Rights| Covid-19 Vaccine| Education| Employment| Employment and Workplace Issues| Infectious Disease and Vaccination| Law Enforcement and Police| Legal Issues and the Courts| Public Health and Public Safety| Vaccine Mandate| Viruses

Broke: Patients Open Up About Money Woes

>> December 27, 2020

Millions of Americans are in financial straits due to Covid layoffs and furloughs. A doctor describes how he gets patients to talk about why they’re in trouble and what they do about it to create an eye-opening portrait.

topics: Business and Industry| Consumerism| Consumerism and Consumer Safety/Protection| Covid-19 Pandemic| Economics| Economics and Finance| Employment| Employment and Workplace Issues| Poverty| Public Health and Public Safety| Unemployment| Viruses

Medical Notes: Week of November 15, 2020

>> November 15, 2020

A study finds that some occupations may be more at risk of getting seriously ill. Then, a new study shows that men in jobs with hard physical work have a 55 percent higher risk of developing dementia, compared to men doing more sedentary work. And finally… it’s no secret that alcohol consumption has gone up in the pandemic. But a recent survey has quantified …

topics: Behavioral Science| Business and Industry| Covid-19 Pandemic| Employment and Workplace Issues| Infectious Disease and Vaccination| Mental Health| News and Headlines| Psychology and Psychiatry| Science| Viruses
Time Blindness

Time Blindness

>> November 8, 2020

Someone who is always late for everything and never finishes any project on time is often labeled as irresponsible, lazy, or purposely insulting. But they may be suffering from a brain abnormality called time blindness that’s often a part of ADHD, with often sad consequences.

topics: Business and Industry| Children and Parenting| Disabilities| Education| Employment| Employment and Workplace Issues| Family and Interpersonal Relationships| Health Care| Mental Health| Myths| Parenting Issues| Productivity| Stigma and Stereotypes| Time Management| Unemployment
Black Lung Disease: Still All Too Present

Black Lung Disease: Still All Too Present

>> November 1, 2020

The disease is completely preventable, but a distinguished reporter and author has still found plenty of it among today’s miners.

topics: Business and Industry| Employment| Employment and Workplace Issues| Environment| Environmental Science and Climate Change| Federal Government and Regulation| Health Care| Public Health| Public Health and Public Safety| Work
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