Mental health
IOSH conference: workers must “put hands up” for help on mental health
Communication is key to ensuring workplace mental health issues are addressed, a campaigner and consultant has told the IOSH conference.
Geoff McDonald, said workers should ‘put their hands up and ask for help’ if they are suffering from mental health problems in the workplace.
McDonald, who speaks about his own personal mental health journey during his time at Unilever as a former global VP of HR marketing, communications, sustainability & water, told delegates that line managers needed to ensure they were able to have conversations with staff – and that a culture of trust about discussing mental health issues existed.
Speaking about his experience, McDonald said there were some ‘very dark moments’ and it was through communication and talking openly about the issue that he was able to move forward.
Progress
He said: “Why in 2017, when we have put people on the moon, can we still not openly talk about our mental health at work?
“I want everyone in workplaces all over the world to feel that they genuinely have the choice to put their hand up and ask for help if they are suffering from depression, anxiety or bipolar, just as they would if they were suffering from a physical illness.
McDonald also mentioned a friend who had died and said that ‘stigma killed my friend’.
He said: “If he had been suffering from a physical illness he would have put his hand up and asked for help. If my friend had that choice he may still be here today.”
According to McDonald, he said workers ‘energy’ was vital – driven by physical, emotional and mental health – and called it the ‘most limiting resource’ within businesses.
Frazzled at work
He said: “People are frazzled. What have we done to the workplace to sap the energy out of people? Why don’t we have workplaces where we are talking about enhancing the energy of people, not making them resilient and throwing more at them?
“We can have knowledge, skills and behaviours but if we don’t have energy, we cannot perform.”
McDonald claimed that progress in improving workplace safety had been achieved – and it was now the time to do the same for health and wellbeing. He said engaging with business leaders, upskilling workers to spot signs of poor mental health, and ‘shifting the narrative’ were crucial to success.
He said: “If a flower doesn’t bloom, there is nothing wrong with the flower. It is the environment in which it lives.”
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IOSH conference: workers must “put hands up” for help on mental health
Communication is key to ensuring workplace mental health issues are addressed, a campaigner and consultant has told the IOSH conference.
James Evison
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So true but, who in their right mind it going to stick their head above the trenches if, they can continue to cope and tolerate their ill-health when, self-harming is still preferable to disclosure of any kind ?
Common and well known example; Display Screen Equipment user operators have been told for the last 25 years, any symptoms and/or long term consequences of Screen Fatigue / Computer Vision Syndrome (CVS) are not only TEMPORARY (NOT) but, YOUR FAULT regardless of, the legislative instruments and technology being in place since 1974 and 90’s respectively.
Even the manufacturers of DSE complied with the 1990 EU Manual Handling & DSE Directive long before the 1998 PUWER Act just no one including UK Gov promoted the implementation of effective induction training for DSE user operators in education or employment.
It has been just been left to the user operator to search for the mitigative solutions on their own which has meant that the majority of user operators are, in affect, disabled by an average of 20% deficit in performance and productivity (1 day in 5), exacerbating the cost of presenteeism in work.
Interesting that the numerous work-related stress claims are being brought under the 2010 Equality Act rather than any of the many preexisting occupational health provisions – I wonder why, hahaha