Leadership and Employee Mental Health in Digital Work Environments
Purpose: This paper examines the major threats to employee mental health in the era of digital transformation, with particular attention to team members working in technology-saturated environments. It analyzes how digital work conditions, including information overload, technostress, permanent online availability, and social isolation, affect psychological well-being. The study also explores organizational and psychological support mechanisms that may mitigate these risks. Design/methodology/approach: The study adopts a conceptual research approach based on a critical review of recent academic literature, international institutional reports, and selected organizational practices. The analysis integrates perspectives from occupational health, organizational behavior, and human resource management. Particular attention is given to psychosocial risk factors associated with digital work environments and evidence-based support interventions. Findings: The analysis suggests that digital transformation has significantly altered working conditions and increased exposure to psychosocial risks. Information overload, FoMO, technostress, work-home boundary erosion, and social isolation are shown to be key determinants of poorer mental well-being among employees. The findings also indicate that organizational interventions, digital mental health tools, and psychological capital development may improve resilience, engagement, and well-being in contemporary workplaces. Research limitations/implications: The paper is conceptual and based on secondary sources rather than original empirical data. Future research should investigate the long-term effects of digital work conditions on mental health across sectors and demographic groups. Additional empirical studies could also assess the effectiveness of different organizational interventions in remote, hybrid, and AI-mediated work settings. Practical recommendations: Organizations should treat employee mental health as a strategic HR and leadership issue rather than an optional benefit. Employers should implement evidence-based well-being programs, regulate digital availability, and design work systems that reduce psychosocial overload. Greater attention should also be given to psychologically safe communication, employee autonomy, and support mechanisms tailored to digitally intensive work environments.