Workplace anxiety leads to burnout if not acknowledged, survey finds
The survey identified the top anxiety-inducing situations at work, with performance reviews affecting 50% of employees.
Workplace anxiety, if left unaddressed, can lead to burnout and reduced productivity, according to research by music licensing company PPL PRS.
Their survey identified the top anxiety-inducing situations at work, with performance reviews affecting 50% of employees, followed by starting new projects (39%), client meetings (31%), internal meetings (29%), and answering calls (28%).
Marianne Rizkallah, a music therapist involved in the study, explained that anxiety manifests in physical and mental symptoms.
She said: “Employees struggling with anxiety may experience physical symptoms such as a quickened heart rate, shallow breaths, fatigue, and muscle aches.
“Workplace anxiety can also manifest mentally and emotionally, with symptoms like a quick temper or paranoid behaviour, such as overreacting to or presuming the worst from comments from colleagues or managers.”
The study highlighted that face-to-face interactions, such as performance reviews, are among the leading triggers of workplace anxiety.
The research noted: “Performance reviews, in particular, can induce a fight-or-flight reaction for those under the spotlight.”
Phone anxiety, an extension of social anxiety, also emerged as a common issue, with employees preferring written communication over verbal interactions.












