Why Psychosocial Hazards Are Now a Priority
Psychosocial hazards have moved from a peripheral concern to a central regulatory obligation under the WHS Regulation 2025. Regulation 55C requires every PCBU to identify psychosocial hazards in the workplace that may give rise to psychosocial risks to health and safety. Regulation 55D requires the PCBU to manage those risks by eliminating them so far as is reasonably practicable, or if elimination is not reasonably practicable, minimising them so far as is reasonably practicable. These are not aspirational statements. They are enforceable duties that carry the same penalties as any other WHS obligation. The regulatory shift reflects decades of evidence that psychological injury, stress-related illness, burnout, and mental health deterioration are foreseeable consequences of poorly managed work design, excessive workload, inadequate support, bullying, harassment, and exposure to traumatic events. Psychological injury claims now represent one of the most expensive categories of workers compensation, with longer recovery times and higher costs per claim than most physical injuries. Regulators across Australia have committed to proactive enforcement of psychosocial hazard management obligations.
The 14 Recognised Psychosocial Hazards
The approved Code of Practice for Managing the Risk of Psychosocial Hazards at Work identifies 14 categories of psychosocial hazard that PCBUs must consider. These are job demands including workload, pace, and hours of work. Role clarity covering whether workers understand their responsibilities and authority. Low job control where workers have little autonomy over how they perform their tasks. Poor support from supervisors or colleagues. Lack of recognition or reward for effort and contribution. Poor organisational change management where changes are imposed without consultation. Low organisational justice including unfair treatment, favouritism, and inconsistent application of policies. Traumatic events or material exposure to death, serious injury, or violence. Remote or isolated work where workers cannot access timely assistance. Poor physical environment including noise, temperature, and cramped conditions. Violence and aggression from clients, customers, patients, or members of the public. Bullying as repeated unreasonable behaviour directed at a worker. Harassment including sexual harassment and harassment on the basis of protected attributes. Conflict or poor workplace relationships including interpersonal tension and team dysfunction.
Industry-Specific Psychosocial Hazard Profiles
Different industries face different psychosocial hazard profiles based on the nature of the work performed. Construction workers face high job demands, time pressure, long hours, remote or isolated work on regional projects, exposure to traumatic events including serious injuries and fatalities on site, and a workplace culture that historically discourages reporting of psychological distress. Healthcare workers face emotional demands from patient suffering and death, violence and aggression from patients and family members, high workload with understaffing, shift work disrupting sleep and social functioning, and moral injury when resource constraints prevent optimal care delivery. Emergency services personnel face cumulative and acute traumatic exposure, shift work, high-stakes decision making under pressure, and organisational cultures that may stigmatise help-seeking behaviour. Retail and hospitality workers face customer aggression, low job control, unpredictable rostering, low pay relative to demands, and job insecurity. Office-based workers face excessive workload, poor change management, role ambiguity, workplace bullying, and the blurring of work-life boundaries through digital connectivity.