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23 Jan 2019

Mental health crisis taking place in the workplace

Reviewing the 2018 Mental Health at Work Report1 , it’s immediately apparent that the prevalence of mental health issues has now reached a crisis point in the UK. Nearly two-thirds of people (61 per cent) have experienced a mental health issue due to work and one in three have been formally diagnosed with a mental health condition.

By any standard this is an epidemic and must be treated as such, with much more done to address the root causes of the problem.

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What’s driving the mental health crisis?

When it comes to the factors driving the mental health epidemic, this year’s data highlights the impact that financial insecurity is having. A quarter of employees say they are struggling to make ends meet and one in eight people (12 per cent) believe it likely that they could lose their job in the next 12 months.

Two-thirds of employees say that their mental health and wellbeing is affected by their personal job security (66 per cent). With 90 per cent of people in their 20’s saying their mental health is affected by the cost of living.

Minority stress is also affecting some individuals, with 81 per cent of LGBT+ people experiencing a mental health condition and 46 per cent having been formally diagnosed, compared to 33 per cent of non-LGBT+ people.

Work is being put before health 

At the same time, although 85 per cent of managers now acknowledge that employee wellbeing is their responsibility, 64 per cent say they have had to put the interests of their organisation above the wellbeing of their people.

This means that instead of enabling people to work in ways that allow them to thrive – with reasonable demands being placed upon them, control over their workload and supportive management in place – unhealthy working conditions are being allowed to fester. Conditions that also allow toxic blame cultures, bullying and sexual harassment to go unaddressed.

So long as this continues, disjointed wellbeing initiatives or half-hearted attempts to treat those affected are no longer enough. There is a saying that when a flower doesn’t bloom, you need to fix the environment, not the flower.

This isn’t about documenting what should happen, but getting managers and c-level executives to lead by example to create genuine culture change. As well as addressing the underlying dimensions of wellbeing, such as financial wellbeing, that influence our residual stress and anxiety levels.

For more insights on how you can resolve the underlying factors driving the prevalence of mental health issues in your organisation, download Solving the Mental Health Epidemic, our free guide to tackling the root causes of the mental health crisis. 

This article is provided by Mercer. 

  1. Mental Health at Work report, 2018 
    https://wellbeing.bitc.org.uk/all-resources/research-articles/mental-health-work-report-2018

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