Promoting mental health in the workplace can benefit both employers and employees by improving:
- productivity
- mood
- employee satisfaction
- staff retention
- teamwork
Promoting mental health also makes economic sense because it decreases:
- short- or long-term medical leave due to physical or mental illness brought on by workplace conditions
- the need to replace staff
- workplace injuries and accidents caused by the inability to focus due to stress and other mental concerns
- rates of missed work due to stress, exhaustion or depression
- the inability to successfully complete work
Promoting mental health in the workplace for employers includes the following.
- Be clear about tasks and work responsibilities.
- Make sure job descriptions are current, clear and specific.
- Discuss with employees how their work contributes to the organization.
- Assign manageable workloads.
- Ask employees for input on how to better organize work to meet deadlines.
- Work with employees to develop realistic project goals and work plans.
- Provide opportunities to learn and grow professionally.
- Support development of interpersonal, emotional and job skills.
- Create a mentor program that links new employees to experienced ones to nurture an environment of professional support.
- Post jobs internally first.
- Have conflict and dispute resolution practices in place.
- Use a problem-solving method that will:
- explore the issue from everyone’s perspective
- understand the concerns of all parties
- develop different options
- choose a solution that works for everyone
- carry out the solution
- evaluate outcomes to see if they were successful
- Use a problem-solving method that will:
- Involve employees in decision-making.
- Discuss how their work fits into the decision-making process.
- Give employees an opportunity to provide input and receive feedback.
- Recognize employee work achievements in a fair and timely manner.
- Reward a team that works well together.
- Celebrate important workplace anniversaries.
- Make sure employees eat when they have to work overtime.
- Host activities for all employees like a summer barbecue.
- Offer flexible work arrangements.
Share This Article
Choose Your Platform: Facebook Twitter Google Plus