Why we should care about mental health in the workplace

Two people sitting on a couch, a medium haired male with medium length, straight hair and a medium skinned woman with short, dyed blond, curly hair. The words read "Why we should care about mental health in the workplace"

When we meet someone new, we often get the inevitable question, "What do you do?"

Since I started my business last November, my answer to this question has become increasingly simplified. 

First, saying you're a consultant is the quickest way to see eyes glaze over.

I used to try to explain that I provide speaking, education, and consulting for companies and professional organizations on improving mental health in the workplace.

Today, I start with "I help companies talk about mental health."

I have yet to meet someone that does not connect to this. Either they are a manager in need of resources to help their team struggling with burnout and overwork, an individual dealing with their personal mental health challenges, or a leader trying to figure out how to create a healthier workplace culture.

The issue is that mental health in the workplace is a broad topic and one with many differing views and strategies to support the problems. 

Today, I wanted to get back to the basics and provide some information on why supporting mental health in the workplace is good for business, what the research says regarding trends in mental health challenges and needs, and a basic list of best practices to help you get started moving your company in the right direction.

As someone who has been hospitalized many times and used FMLA and medical leave even more, I can tell you from experience that it is best to get on top of these issues early.

As a professional in this space, I know there is hope. In building a solid and committed foundation, your employees will feel valued, heard, and supported to do their best work, business will improve, and your overall culture will thrive.

The Basics

$16 trillion: potential cost to the world economy between 2010 and 2030 for mental health conditions. 12 billion days of lost productivity every year to anxiety and depression. 48% of Gen Z and 44% of Millennials say they feel stressed all or most

Infographic: $16 trillion: potential cost to the world economy between 2010 and 2030 for mental health conditions. 12 billion days of lost productivity every year to anxiety and depression. 48% of Gen Z and 44% of Millennials say they feel stressed all or most of the time.

The Business Case

To start, supporting mental health is good for business! Here are three mental health best practices and how they can improve business:

Provide actionable steps to address mental health challenges and burnout

  • Reduce healthcare costs

  • Reduce the number of employees taking disability leave

  • Reduce the length of disability leave

  • Enhance productivity

Develop a culture of well-being and psychological safety

  • Increase employee satisfaction and engagement

  • Increase innovation and creativity

  • Improve retention and productivity

  • Enhance communication and feedback

Build confident and vulnerable leadership with an inclusive mindset

  • Build trust, resilience, and collaboration

  • Employees feel seen, heard, and valued

  • Employees feel appreciated and recognized 

Mind Share Partners' 2023 Mental Health at Work Report in partnership with qualtrics

Mind Share Partners' 2023 Mental Health at Work Report in partnership with Qualtrics

According to Mind Share Partner's latest research, "the future of mental health will be a 'back to basics'" in which we must focus on culture, safety, and community.

Mind Share Partners' 2023 Mental Health at Work Report in partnership with qualtrics

Here are some key findings from Mind Share Partner's 2023 Mental Health at Work Report:

Key Findings

#1. Mental health challenges are improving and worsening.

Mental health symptoms have improved since 2021, but workers’ views of overall mental health also declined. 

#2. Employer investments in work are having a net positive impact on mental health.

Unlike previous years, the positive impact of the workplace on workers' mental health outweighed the negative.

#3. Workers want healthy work cultures, not self-care perks.

Healthy and sustainable cultures of work were rated more helpful than therapy and self-care resources.

#4. Employers making meaningful investments in DEIBJ see payoffs.

But marginalized identities (Black, LatinX, AAPI, LGBTQ+) continue to face disproportionate challenges.

#5. Psychological safety declined amidst perceptions of diminishing support from employers.

Less than 40% said their employer prioritizes mental health.

#6. When it comes to the hybrid work debate, employee voice matters.

Workers who were hybrid by choice reported shorter mental health symptoms, less stigma, and a better relationship to work.

*Visit the report linked above for the complete research, guidance, and recommendations.

More recent research on mental health in the workplace:

Best Practices

The US Surgeon General’s Framework for Workplace Mental Health & Well-Being shows the five essentials for workplace mental health and well-being: Protection from harm (safety and security), Connection & Community (social support and belonging), Work-Life Harmony (Autonomy and Flexibility), Mattering at Work (Dignity and Meaning), and Opportunity for Growth (Learning and Accomplishment).

While there are many best practices to improve employee mental health, the US Surgeon General's Framework for Workplace Mental Health & Well-Being is a great place to start. Its five essentials for supporting employee mental health and well-being capture many top practices in one comprehensive plan.

The US Surgeon General’s Framework for Workplace Mental Health & Well-Being shows the five essentials for workplace mental health and well-being: Protection from harm (safety and security), Connection & Community (social support and belonging), Work-Life Harmony (Autonomy and Flexibility), Mattering at Work (Dignity and Meaning), and Opportunity for Growth (Learning and Accomplishment).

The US Surgeon General states, "Centered on the worker voice and equity, these five Essentials support workplaces as engines of well-being. Each Essential is grounded in two human needs, shared across industries and roles. Creating a plan with all workers to enact these components can help reimagine workplaces as engines of well-being." The five essentials are as follows: 

Protection from Harm

  • Prioritize workplace physical and psychological safety 

  • Enable adequate rest 

  • Normalize and support mental health 

  • Operationalize DEIA (Diversity, Equity, Inclusion & Accessibility) norms, policies, and programs 

Work-Life Harmony 

  • Provide more autonomy over how work is done 

  • Make schedules as flexible and predictable as possible 

  • Increase access to paid leave 

  • Respect boundaries between work and non-work time 

Mattering at Work 

  • Provide a living wage 

  • Engage workers in workplace decisions 

  • Build a culture of gratitude and recognition 

  • Connect individual work with organizational mission 

Connection & Community 

  • Create cultures of inclusion and belonging 

  • Cultivate trusted relationships 

  • Foster collaboration and teamwork 

Opportunity for Growth 

  • Offer quality training, education, and mentoring 

  • Foster clear, equitable pathways for career advancement 

  • Ensure relevant, reciprocal feedback

Suggestions from a Lived Experience Advisor

Linea leaning against a doorway in her home

Here are some of my suggestions as someone who not only works in this space but also lives with a mental illness.

Be preventative: 

Like having regular check-ups with your doctor, create a system of support for mental health that focuses on maintaining a healthy environment rather than making adjustments after a crisis.

Bake it in: 

Build mental health and wellness into your company policies, systems, projects, and initiatives. Remember that even little things, like your internal communications, can significantly impact mental health.

Think beyond benefits: 

While a strong benefits package is powerful for improving mental health, think of ways you can support mental health beyond the benefits package. Examples include building supportive office environments for neurodivergent employees, having well-supported Employee Resource Groups (ERG), and manager training on improving psychological safety.

Start the conversation and keep it going

If you don't talk about mental health in the workplace, consider developing a mental health awareness campaign to normalize the conversation. Once the conversation is started, keep it going year-round to ensure your employees know you are committed to improving mental health in the workplace.

Remember diversity and intersecting identities

None of us live in a bubble; we all have many pieces of ourselves that make up our identity. This means that a wide variety of factors, including race, age, religion, ability, social status, and more, also impact our mental health.

When building mental health programs and improvements in the workplace, keep diversity in mind, knowing that outcomes may differ depending on our needs. Mental health challenges and adverse outcomes disproportionately impact many historically marginalized communities, leading to additional discrimination and challenges.

How I can help

Linea presenting in front of an audience in a bookstore

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