With chronic stress affecting more than 100 million Americans, WalletHub released an in-depth study Monday, outlining the 180 most and least stressed cities in the nation across 39 metrics.

The investigation follows the statistic that workplace-related stress alone costs society more than $300 billion per year, according to the American Institute of Stress.

The WalletHub study, released Monday, covered work stress, financial stress, family stress and health and safety stress. Within these metrics are certain categories with specific weights graded on a 100-point scale.

The data set ranges from average weekly work hours to debt load to divorce and suicide rates.

Not surprisingly, money topped the list as the number one stress-factor in the nation.

In the twenty-first century, Americans are working longer and harder than ever, an average of 47 hours per week due to the demands of the modern workplace. U.S. workers clock in more hours on the job than any other industrial country, according to The American Institute of Stress.

Detroit, Michigan, ranked as the most stressed city in America. It has the highest poverty and unemployment rates, the second highest divorce rate and the lowest average hours of sleep per night. Detroit’s total score is a whopping 62.72 out of 100, according to the study.

Cleveland, Ohio, comes right behind Detroit. It has the highest divorce rate, the second highest crime rate and ranks first in overall financial stress.

Fremont, California, is the nation’s least stressed city. It has the lowest divorce rate at 10.22%. Overall, Fremont scored 29.19 out of 100.

South Burlington, Vermont, has the lowest unemployment rate, 1.70%, 5.3 times lower than in Detroit, where 9% of the population is unemployed.

The safest city is Santa Clarita, California, scoring the lowest crime rate. Memphis, Tenn. has the highest crime rate.

Burlington and South Burlington, Vermont, have the lowest share of adults in fair or poor health at 9.90%.

WalletHub interviewed experts on how employees can combat the inevitable stress in a working environment.

“First, they need to recognize and understand the types of stress inherent in the work being performed, as well as how to help employees recover from exposure to those types of stress,” Julie Ann Leifeld, the clinic director at Southern Connecticut State University, said.

“Second, management needs to develop a workplace culture in which holistic well-being is considered a strategy, not a privilege,”

 

Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience. For licensing opportunities of our original content, please contact licensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org

Sarah Price

Share
Published by
Sarah Price

Recent Posts

The Benefits of Learning Platforms in a Classroom Environment

The integration of learning platforms in the traditional classroom environment has had a huge impact…

9 hours ago

Hegseth Launches Major Anti-Drone Task Force Against Growing Airspace Threat

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth directed the Army Thursday to create a new task force designed…

12 hours ago

Trump Admin Asks Congress To Cancel $5 Billion In Foreign Aid Using Hotly-Contested Maneuver

The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) announced the cancellation of nearly $5 billion in…

12 hours ago

NIH Schemes To Keep Risky Viral Research Alive Despite Trump Crackdown

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) plans to continue creating novel pandemic viruses in apparent…

12 hours ago

FTC Puts Google On Notice For ‘Partisan’ Filtering Against Republicans

Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Chairman Andrew Ferguson is pressing Google over allegations that its Gmail…

19 hours ago

Transgenderism Is The Number One Threat To Gen Z, Not Guns

How many times are we going to turn a blind eye to America’s youth being…

19 hours ago