Thursday, June 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Women More Likely Than Men To Experience Workplace Harassment: StatsCan

The Canadian Press, 17 Dec, 2018 06:35 PM
  • Women More Likely Than Men To Experience Workplace Harassment: StatsCan

OTTAWA — A new study suggests women are more likely than men to experience workplace harassment, and that it's more common in health-related fields.


The Statistics Canada report, "Harassment in Canadian workplaces," is based on 2016 data from the General Social Survey on Canadians at Work and Home.


The survey asked about 9,000 people between the ages of 15 and 64 about incidents of harassment during the previous 12 months. It defines workplace harassment as experiences of verbal abuse, humiliating behaviour, threats, physical violence, and unwanted sexual attention or sexual harassment.


More women than men reported experiencing at least one such incident, with 19 per cent of women versus 13 per cent of men saying they had been harassed at work.


Both men and women said clients or customers were the most common source of harassment, including 53 per cent of women and 42 per cent of men.


The study also notes women are more likely to work in the health field, which involves a high degree of interaction with the public.


Overall, those in the health field — including nurses and doctors — had a 23 per cent probability of reporting harassment, including 27 per cent of women and 21 per cent of men.


In contrast, those in natural and applied sciences — such as engineers and computer and information system professionals — had a 9 per cent probability of reporting harassment.


Researchers also linked workplace harassment to workplace well-being, such as job dissatisfaction and level of motivation.


Women who reported harassment were three times more likely to say they were unhappy with their job, at 14 per cent, than those who did not. Similar results were found for men.


Harassment by a supervisor or manager was also associated with more negative effects on workplace well-being than harassment by someone else.


The study also linked workplace harassment to personal well-being, with 18 per cent of men and 16 per cent of women who reported incidents saying they had poor mental health, compared to 6 per cent of men and 8 per cent of women who had not been harassed.


Other findings include:


-After clients or customers, the next most common source of harassment for men was their supervisor or manager at 39 per cent. Among women, it was colleagues and peers at 34 per cent;


-13 per cent of women and 10 per cent of men reported having experienced verbal abuse;


-6 per cent of women and 5 per cent of men reported experiencing humiliating behaviour;


-Men and women were equally likely to report having experienced threats in the workplace, at 3 per cent.


-About 4 per cent of women and less than 1 per cent of men reported having experienced sexual harassment or unwanted sexual attention in the workplace;


-About 3 per cent of women reported having experienced physical violence, versus about 1 per cent of men.

MORE National ARTICLES

British Columbia Wildfire Smoke Prompts Air Quality Advisories In Alberta

British Columbia Wildfire Smoke Prompts Air Quality Advisories In Alberta
While much of B.C. has been under air quality warnings for days, Environment Canada now says all of western and central Alberta, including Calgary and Edmonton, will experience poor air quality because of smoke from hundreds of B.C. fires.

British Columbia Wildfire Smoke Prompts Air Quality Advisories In Alberta

Trinity Western University Drops Mandatory Ban On Sex Outside Of Heterosexual Marriage

 A Christian university in British Columbia will no longer require students to adhere to a covenant forbidding sex outside of heterosexual marriage.

Trinity Western University Drops Mandatory Ban On Sex Outside Of Heterosexual Marriage

Man Charged In Toronto Subway Homicide Has Case Put Over To December

Man Charged In Toronto Subway Homicide Has Case Put Over To December
TORONTO — The case of a man accused of killing an elderly stranger by pushing him in front of a Toronto subway train has been put over until December.

Man Charged In Toronto Subway Homicide Has Case Put Over To December

Husband Escapes, Wife Missing After Car Swept Off Roadway In B.C. Mudslide

Husband Escapes, Wife Missing After Car Swept Off Roadway In B.C. Mudslide
CACHE CREEK, B.C. — Search crews are looking for a woman who was inside a vintage convertible that was swept off a highway in a mudslide in the province's Interior on Saturday.

Husband Escapes, Wife Missing After Car Swept Off Roadway In B.C. Mudslide

Ontario Wants Feds To Foot $200M Bill For Asylum Seekers In The Province

OTTAWA — Ontario is renewing its demand that the federal government foot the entire bill for services provided to thousands of irregular border crossers who are seeking asylum in the province.

Ontario Wants Feds To Foot $200M Bill For Asylum Seekers In The Province

Ex-Uber Driver Mohmamed Ben Azaza Hiding In Quebec Faces Extradition To California On Rape Charge

U.S. authorities are seeking to extradite a former Uber driver who was being investigated on rape charges and vanished before turning up in Quebec earlier this summer.

Ex-Uber Driver Mohmamed Ben Azaza Hiding In Quebec Faces Extradition To California On Rape Charge