FROLITICKS

Satirical commentary on Canadian and American current political issues

Big Brother is Watching You at Your Workplace. So What!

During the late 1900s, the office where I was working introduced access cards, as one security measure, primarily used to enter the workplace.  Everyone suspected, and rightly so, that such technology would allow an employer to keep track of the goings and comings of staff, all registered and maintained by management on an accessible data base.  It would register one’s arrival and departure from the office, including during lunch and coffee breaks outside the office.  Subsequently, word processing units replaced the more traditional typing pools, allowing supervisors the possibility of tracking the amount of and speed of input into the system.  Not long after, personal desktop computers replaced the need for separate word processing units as employees were required to input their work individually at their work stations.  With this technology, programs could be introduced to track one’s work remotely.  Of course, the introduction of these new technologies, most often used to track productivity, also raised a number of privacy and human relations issues.  Take the worst case scenario in call centres, where instantaneous tracking information is now available 24/7.

Employee monitoring software, sometimes called “spyware”, has now become a major issue, for employees and employers alike.  According to a survey from 1E, an information-technology outsourcing firm, 73 percent of Informatics Technology (IT) managers are uncomfortable telling their staff to install it.  Some managers have become fanatical about implementing surveillance technology, researchers referring to it as a symptom of “productivity paranoia”.  However, the negative impacts on workers of constant surveillance at work can include reduced trust and loyalty, along with increased anxiety, stress and even resignations.  The use of spyware, often employing key performance indicators, is increasingly seen as a major human relations issue, especially where employees may not be aware of its existence or have not given their approval to its restricted use under certain specified conditions.

With the introduction of more remote work during the pandemic, more businesses are using monitoring tools to track productivity in an increasingly remote-work world.  The issue has risen to a level of concern that, as of Oct. 11, 2022, employers in the province of Ontario with 25 or more workers will need to have a written policy on electronic monitoring that outlines how and why staff are monitored, what the information will be used for and to disclose that policy to employees.  The new rule is ingrained in the province’s labour standards legislation.  However, while Ontario is the first province to enact a disclosure requirement on electronic monitoring, the rules don’t grant workers new privacy rights.  Most Ontario employees still don’t have any such protections.  The province of Quebec passed legislation in September 2022 that requires employers to have a specific purpose for the data they collect from employees.  While it will continue to allow Quebec employers to use surveillance technologies, by Sept. 22, 2023, it will require them to have a serious and legitimate purpose for their use, as well as to disclose any monitoring to employees and allow them to opt out.

Joe Masoodi, a co-author of the report and a senior policy analyst at TMU’s Leadership Lab, reportedly said monitoring tools aren’t inherently bad and can be used for professional development.  However, these tools fail to capture intangible elements of work like person-to-person interactions that require empathy and compassion.  They can also have “serious consequences” for employees, such as being held back from a promotion or facing disciplinary measures for not meeting the company’s key performance indicators metrics.  For some employees, such surveillance will add to work-related stress and possibly to physical or mental health issues.

The Ontario rule ultimately could be a positive change, because it will prompt employers to justify why they want to monitor employees, and the Quebec rule will then allow employees to opt out.  It’s clear that employers have a right to monitor employees’ productivity, but not at the cost of their trust, health and morale.  The more that an employer is open about such surveillance, the better it can be used in order to achieve its intended benefits without causing negative consequences when it comes to human relations matters.

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Children’s Mental Health is Still a Major Concern During the Pandemic Shutdown

Among the first institutions to be shutdown as the result of the pandemic were our schools. All of a sudden, our children had their normal routines turned upside down.  Back in March, I blogged about the risk to kids’ mental health: Mental Health Of Children Is Still A Major Concern During Pandemic Shutdown 05 20.doc. For two months now, children have been kept home from school, trying to learn online, being entertained and worried about the financial and health risks to their parents. Fear and isolation can be major contributors to mental illness. A recent survey (May 2020) by the Angus Reid Institute in Canada showed that children (aged 10 to 17) are starting to display certain concerning attitudes and behaviors when it comes to staying at home. Believe it or not, not only are they bored but many are ready to go back to school, if only to see their friends in person. Realistically, in most provinces and states, the current school year is unfortunately finished.

There is only so much TV/streaming media content and playing video games that kids can take! Texting and telephoning friends and spending time on social media was O.K. at the start, but kids would now rather meet up with their friends and teachers face-to-face. There is little doubt that an increasing degree of boredom and stress is setting in. Online learning is not what it was hoped to be, and is certainly no substitute for classroom instruction and one-on-one expert assistance.

Then there are the parents. For those working from home, it’s difficult and stressful times, especially when caring for toddlers. They are finding that working and home schooling can be very demanding. For those parents who are unemployed, just paying the bills has become a major issue. Kids pick up on their parents’ anxieties. Thankfully, although children are less vulnerable to serious virus-related health issues, the household tension is worse if parents or other household members do become sick with the virus. Just complying with all the additional precautions that must be taken can be a major stressor for kids. After all, it’s not their fault that they can be significant transmitters of the disease.

One cannot envy parenting under these challenging circumstances. Trying to implement a fairly normal and balanced routine in the household is not easy for adults. Imagine what it’s like for kids? Hopefully as more and more facilities are slowly and cautiously opened, families will be able to expand their activities beyond their homes. Exercise and getting outdoors are keys to maintaining one’s mental and physical health. This is especially true for our children.

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Canada Needs Laws Barring Discrimination Based on Genetic Test Results

In 2009, the U.S. passed the federal Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act which bars discrimination by insurers and employers based on genetic test results.  The law was enacted in response to breakthroughs in genetic testing, including the development of readily available tests that can detect whether individuals are at risk for certain diseases or other medical conditions.  Developments had raised concerns that employers or insurers would use the information to deny coverage or employment to those at higher risk.

Genetic testing has come a long way. Tests have been developed to determine the probability of someone being potentially at risk for dementia, osteoporosis, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and numerous other diseases.  Currently, individuals tend to be the focus of genetic testing for their personal or health reasons.  This is where the privacy of such information becomes important, particularly as it pertains to employment and health or life insurance.  However, despite many advances in the science of the human genome, the fact is that it is still difficult to predict with absolute certainty that an individual will actually have the disease based solely on genetic testing.  Other important environmental considerations must also be taken into account when examining a person’s potential health risks.

For these reasons, laws are required to prevent genetic discrimination and to guarantee the rights of people to privacy of genetic testing results. This is a matter between the individual and his/her physician, not to be shared with anyone else without the individual’s consent.  As was the case in the U.S., the Canadian Life and Health Insurance Association on behalf of insurance providers believes that insurers have every right to information about a client’s genetic makeup.  However, given the reasons for genetic testing, the uncertainty of the science and other environmental considerations, the need for and use of such information by insurers and employers is really questionable.

Recently, a private members’ bill from the Senate was passed which would ensure that Canadians can get genetic tests to help identify health risks and take preventive measures.   This could be undertaken without fear that they’ll be penalized when it comes to getting a job or life and health insurance.  However, in a bizarre twist, the federal government is arguing that the bill amounts to an unconstitutional use of the federal criminal law power to intrude into provincial jurisdiction to regulate the insurance industry.  This ignores the fact that under Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Canadians have the legal right to life, liberty and personal security.  The latter should of course include the right to privacy in matters related to their health and well-being.  For this reason, the government needs to proceed implementing the bill and stop its stall tactic of declaring the issue to be an infringement on provincial jurisdiction.  Instead, we should get on with ensuring the privacy of people’s health information, especially when it comes to genetic testing.

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The Prescription Drug Industry is Constantly Manipulating Us When It Comes to Mental Illness

Drugs. Our society almost has a drug for every illness or condition that you may experience.  Need to treat a ‘mental illness’.  No problem.  The drug industry has a pill for it.  The 1980s and 1990s saw an explosion of psychotropic drugs for everything from depression to attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).  Numerous drugs developed initially for adults began to be prescribed to children and adolescents, often by pediatricians and family doctors.  Among the more famous drugs were Ritalin, Adderall, Prozac, Zoloft and Paxil.

Now, don’t get me wrong. There are persons with severe ‘mental illnesses’, including those diagnosed with bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, who have benefited from advances resulting from the psychopharmacological revolution.  Indeed, research has led to us to understand a lot more about brain disorders today.  However, between 1987 and 1996, the percentage of Americans under twenty taking at least one psychiatric drug tripled, from about 2 percent of the youth population to 6 percent, at a minimum an increase of more than a million children.  In both the U.S. and Canada, the number of visits to doctors in which psychotropics were prescribed more than doubled during the same period. We continue to look for quick fixes for complex problems.

Today, the diagnosis and treatment of depression, chronic anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder has further contributed to the growth in the prescription and use of psychotropic meds. Even primary school children are increasingly being diagnosed with depression, never mind the more popular ADHD.  The basic question is what will the side-effects be in the long term for these children?  Researchers have even come up with new mental diagnosis such as ‘oppositional defiant disorder’ for certain childhood disorders.

We have now arrived at the point where the medication generation has grown up. Adolescences and young millennials are taking various meds for which no explanation has been given as to the reasons why, and often without very careful consideration of the potential long-term consequences.  Meanwhile, the prescription drug industry continues to survive, making huge profits and manipulating us when it comes to the treatment of mental illnesses.  No one likes to declare something offhand as a crisis, but this situation should qualify as one.

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Children as Young as 9 are Attempting Suicide in North America

In Southern Ontario, the small town of Woodstock, with roughly 38,000 residents, had five young people 19 and under commit suicide since the beginning of 2016. Local authorities noted that another 36 teens were known to have expressed suicidal thoughts or attempted suicide in neighbouring communities. How can this be?  Where are we as a society going wrong?

Well, the issue of youth suicide is nothing new in both Canada and the U.S.  Indeed, according to a 2011 U.S. study by the University of Washington, children as young as nine years old are attempting to kill themselves every year. Nearly 40 per cent of those who attempted suicide first tried to kill themselves in elementary or middle school.  Suicide is the second-leading cause of death for Canadians between the ages of 10 and 24.  According to Statistics Canada, 25 people in Canada aged 10 to 14 committed suicide in 2008. Girls are more likely to commit suicide than boys, and the proportion of girls dying by their own hand is increasing.  Depression was detected in 40 per cent of suicides. Cyberbullying may play a bigger role in youth suicide today than it did a decade ago.  These are not simply statistics, each number represents someone’s child.

According to recent research, teens who had a schoolmate die by suicide are more likely to consider or attempt taking their own lives than those who haven’t lost a peer to suicide — and the fallout can be longer lasting than once thought. That effect, known as “suicide contagion,” can last two years or longer.  Some believe that this form of contagion may have happened in Woodstock.

Whatever the causes, societies have to seriously begin tackling this issue. Resources have to be allocated to deal with youth mental health issues, reducing the daily pressures and stressors affecting young people, better educating the general population and instituting a comprehensive national strategy to address the issue.  Suicide prevention programs need to focus on elementary and middle school populations as well as high school populations.  The number of youth suicides, especially among girls, has been increasing in recent years. We cannot afford to continue to needlessly loose our children and adolescents to suicide.  The time for talk is over.  The time for action is now.

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Constant Complaining Will Only Make Matters Worst

People tend to constantly complain about a lot of things. We complain about the weather.  We complain about politicians and governments.  Of course, we complain about taxes.  Yet, where does all this complaining really get us.  We become ever more frustrated, anxious, stressed out and in some cases even angry.  We even like to complain about things that we don’t have much control over. Indeed in many instances, complaining often only makes matters worst.

Studies now tell us that constant negative thinking affects our mental health, and in turn our physical health. This repeated outpouring of “negativity” causes certain parts of the brain to adjust in a manner which leads to more destructive outlooks.  Receptors and neurons in the brain start to act in different ways, generally interpreting many daily events in a negative way. Furthermore, we are bombarded everyday with negative events on news media – be it in print, radio, TV or on social media.

Instead of rationally reacting to irritants in a normal way, the first response is one of outright umbrage. Then comes the complaints, even though in many cases there is nothing that one can realistically do about the irritant.  Trying to deal with anxiety and stress, next comes attempts at avoidance in our personal lives.  Often, avoidance takes the form of substance use, including lots of drugs and alcohol.  This in turn can lead to serious substance abuse, including addictions and physical harm.

Research has shown that our mental state greatly influences our physical state. All this added stress and negativity can affect our health in serious ways.  It literally isn’t good for the heart.  So I guess that we should all lighten up, smell the roses so to speak.  Take a deep breath and concentrate primarily on those things that can be controlled and are most important to us, including family and friends.  Prioritize you complaints.

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