Home > Ergology campaigns > Education

Fighting fund for education

To stop the epidemic of job-stress, more people need to know more about it.

This Institute is actively engaged upon five programmes of education.

Two are for professional strategic and clinical (including practical) ergologists – the other three are:

The General Public

The vast majority of people who experience job-stress have no idea where to find hope – or help.

This means that thousands who could avoid the misery of job-stress – the broken homes, the lost careers, don’t. It also means than millions of pounds, euros and dollars are lost to industry unnecessarily every year.

When did you last see a poster for people with issues about excess stress? – Yet this is the single largest cause of absence in Europe.

Clinicians in other fields

We know that people affected by job-stress get better more quickly if their physiological symptoms and their emotional difficulties are addressed simultaneously in relatively short programmes of care.

But we lack the resources to let enough clinicians know about how they can best address the thousands of people they see who would benefit.

Professionals responsible for people affected by job-stress

Enlightened companies know about this Institute and approach us to work together.

The downside of this is that people who work for organisations that aren’t enlightened don’t get the help they deserve from the organisations where, often, they feel their stress problems began.  That isn’t fair.

Please donate to our campaigns here by simply typing the keyword ergology, clicking on search and following the links at the Charities Aid Foundation website. 

 

 

 

 

 

Campaigns

Early effective reporting

Fighting fund for education

Rehabilitation

Model Teaching Clinics

What it costs

Campaigns home

spacer

Make a donation towards Europe's first dedicated Excess Stress Rehabilitation facilities

spacer

Terminology

The Research Institute for Clinical Ergology. Registered Charity Number SC038777 7 January, 2009