Institute for Work & Health, 400 University Avenue, Suite 1800, Toronto, ON, M5G 1S5, Canada.
Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
J Occup Rehabil. 2021 Sep;31(3):638-651. doi: 10.1007/s10926-020-09956-1. Epub 2021 Feb 1.
Deciding whether to disclose a disability to others at work is complex. Many chronic mental and physical health conditions are associated with episodic disability and include times of relative wellness punctuated by intermittent periods of activity limitations. This research draws on the disclosure processes model to examine approach and avoidance disclosure and non-disclosure goals and their association with perceived positive and negative workplace outcomes. Participants were 896 employed individuals (57.7% women) living with a chronic physical or mental health/cognitive condition. They were recruited from an existing national panel and completed an online, cross-sectional survey. Participants were asked about disclosure decisions, reasons for disclosure/non-disclosure, demographic, work context and perceived positive and negative disclosure decision outcomes (e.g., support, stress, lost opportunities). About half the sample (51.2%) had disclosed a disability to their supervisor. Decisions included both approach and avoidance goals. Approach goals (e.g., desire support, want to build trust, maintain the status quo at work) were significantly associated with perceived positive work outcomes regardless of whether a participant disclosed or did not disclose a disability at work, while avoidance goals (e.g., concerns about losing one's job, feeling forced to disclose because others notice a problem) were associated with perceived negative work outcomes. The findings highlight benefits and challenges that workers perceive arise when they choose to disclose or not disclose personal health information. By better understanding disclosure decisions, we can inform organizational health privacy and support gaps to help sustain the employment of people living with disabilities.
在工作中决定是否向他人披露残疾情况是复杂的。许多慢性精神和身体健康状况都与间歇性残疾有关,包括相对健康的时期和间歇性活动受限时期。本研究借鉴披露过程模型,考察了接近和回避披露以及不披露的目标,以及它们与感知到的积极和消极的工作结果之间的关系。参与者是 896 名患有慢性身体或精神健康/认知疾病的在职人员(57.7%为女性)。他们是从一个现有的全国性小组中招募的,并完成了一项在线横断面调查。参与者被问及披露决定、披露/不披露的原因、人口统计学、工作背景以及感知到的积极和消极的披露决策结果(例如,支持、压力、失去机会)。大约一半的样本(51.2%)向主管披露了残疾情况。这些决定包括接近和回避目标。无论参与者是否在工作中披露或不披露残疾情况,接近目标(例如,寻求支持、建立信任、保持工作现状)都与感知到的积极工作结果显著相关,而回避目标(例如,担心失业、因为其他人注意到问题而被迫披露)则与感知到的消极工作结果相关。这些发现强调了工人在选择披露或不披露个人健康信息时所感知到的好处和挑战。通过更好地理解披露决策,我们可以为组织的健康隐私和支持差距提供信息,以帮助维持残疾人士的就业。