Reflect w/ Ed Fassio

AIRD: The New Diagnosis Nobody Wants to Talk About

Ed Fassio

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0:00 | 8:46
Reflect w/ Ed Fassio — where AI tells the stories that matter. University of Florida researchers just gave it a name: AI Replacement Dysfunction — AIRD. It's a clinical stress pattern showing up in workers whose jobs are perceived to be at risk from AI. Not general anxiety. A specific, recognized dysfunction: persistent stress, disrupted sleep, difficulty concentrating, reduced engagement. The numbers are hard to sit with. 1 in 4 employees say AI is already hurting their mental health. 72% feel pressure to work through mental health challenges — up 10 points from last year. 51% reported crying at work in the last 30 days. And here's what makes it complicated: AIRD hits hardest in organizations doing adoption the right way. The transparency that's supposed to build trust actually triggers the anxiety in employees who are honest enough with themselves to understand what's coming. The 42-year-old marketing manager watching AI generate a month of content in 45 minutes. The paralegal who spent seven years mastering contract review. Their expertise — the thing their identity was built around — is being commoditized in real time. Your Move: If you're feeling AIRD, separate your identity from your job description. Your judgment, relationships, and domain knowledge aren't being automated — the routine layers are. If you're a manager, check in with your team this week about how they're actually feeling — not about productivity. The data says 1 in 4 of them are struggling. And if you're an organizational leader: running AI training while privately planning layoffs destroys trust in ways that don't recover. AIRD is a business risk. Treat it like one. — Reflect w/ Ed Fassio | reflectpodcast.com

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