Trauma, Power, and Psychological Safety: Understanding the Mental Health Impact of Workplace Bullying
Highlights
- Workplace bullying, harassment, and sexual abuse are strongly associated with anxiety, depression, PTSD, burnout, sleep disruption, cardiovascular problems, absenteeism, and turnover.
- Diminished psychological safety and toxic or abusive leadership styles intensify psychological harm, while ethical, inclusive, and trauma-informed leadership reduces it.
- A strong psychosocial safety climate, combined with trauma-informed approaches, mitigates re-traumatization, restores trust, and supports recovery.
- The most effective organizational response is multi-level, integrating policy, leadership accountability, safety climate, and targeted supports.
- Workplace bullying should be recognized and addressed as a form of violence and a public and occupational health hazard requiring urgent prevention and intervention.
- Embedding psychological safety as a core organizational value is essential to reducing harm, strengthening resilience, and improving workforce retention and well-being.
- Leaders must adopt trauma-informed and ethical practices to prevent recurrence, rebuild trust, and shape healthier organizational cultures.
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Trauma and Stress-Appraisal Frameworks
3.2. Psychological and Physiological Outcomes
3.3. Leadership and Organizational Context
3.4. Prevention and Intervention
3.5. Measurement and Assessment
3.6. Contexts: Sectors, Remote/Hybrid Work, and Equity
3.7. The Economic Case and Return on Investment
3.8. Limitations and Future Directions
- **First 30 days—Stabilize and signal**. Executive sponsorship is named; a concise statement declares bullying a psychosocial hazard and reaffirms non-retaliation. A cross-functional taskforce (HR, Legal, OH&S, DEI, Operations) inventories current policies, reporting channels, investigation capacity, and data. Immediate **risk controls** are introduced (e.g., safe reporting channel outside supervisory line; triage protocol).
- **Days 31–90—Design and equip**. Co-design a plain-language anti-bullying policy with examples and sanctions aligned to jurisdictional requirements; publish a **decision tree** for leaders and employees (what to do if you witness, experience, or receive a report). Establish standard operating procedures for intake, triage, investigation, and post-finding remediation, including **retaliation monitoring** for 90 days. Build a short **leader micro-curriculum**: recognizing early signs, responding without bias, documenting, offering support, and engaging independent investigators when conflict of interest exists [18,19,20,24]. Pilot team psychological safety practices (check-ins, norms for dissent) in two to three units to localize learning [8,9,25].
- **Days 91–180—Scale and hardwire**. Integrate bullying prevention metrics into quarterly business reviews (e.g., time-to-first response; investigation cycle time; employee perceptions of safety and fairness). Incorporate **behavioral expectations** into performance management and promotion criteria for leaders (civility, fairness, responsiveness). Launch active bystander training and a confidential peer support network to provide psychological first aid. Codify a **remediation/repair menu** (coaching, mediated agreements, reassignment, demotion, termination) tied to severity and patterns. Publish anonymized case learnings to reinforce norms and transparency.
4. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Walker, J. Trauma, Power, and Psychological Safety: Understanding the Mental Health Impact of Workplace Bullying. Healthcare 2025, 13, 3084. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13233084
Walker J. Trauma, Power, and Psychological Safety: Understanding the Mental Health Impact of Workplace Bullying. Healthcare. 2025; 13(23):3084. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13233084
Chicago/Turabian StyleWalker, Jason. 2025. "Trauma, Power, and Psychological Safety: Understanding the Mental Health Impact of Workplace Bullying" Healthcare 13, no. 23: 3084. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13233084
APA StyleWalker, J. (2025). Trauma, Power, and Psychological Safety: Understanding the Mental Health Impact of Workplace Bullying. Healthcare, 13(23), 3084. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13233084

