The Scotsman

Failure to care for ‘invisible disabiliti­es’ is costly

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percent of the UK’S total gross domestic product. However, as revealed by a recent Centre for Mental Health report, mental health issues also cost employers nearly £35bn last year alone, with £10.6bn in sickness absence; £21.2bn in reduced productivi­ty at work; and £3.1bn in replacing staff who left their jobs as a result of their mental health.

What can be done?

While some progress has been made, 40 per cent of UK employees still experience anxiety at work on a regular basis and a quarter of managers still feel ill-equipped to recognise the signs of poor mental health and deal with them adequately.

Fortunatel­y, there are concrete steps that can be taken to tackle these issues and the value of manager and peer support should not be underestim­ated. Having senior staff normalise mental health by addressing the stigmas associated with it, whilst also making reasonable adjustment­s for those colleagues who need it, is crucial to embedding acceptance into the culture of organisati­ons everywhere. To ensure that progress is being made, support networks and training in the workplace are a necessity.

State Street recognises the importance of providing support for its employees with “invisible disabiliti­es”. In 2015, the company launched its first global health and wellbeing programme, Bewell, to focus on bettering employees’ physical, financial and emotional health. With regular workshops designed to help participan­ts manage their stress and anxiety, weekly exercise classes, flexible work arrangemen­ts, counsellin­g for employees and their family, and mental health guidance for managers, Bewell works tirelessly to mitigate, resolve and prevent issues affecting its participan­ts’ wellbeing.

In addition to this programme, State Street provides mental health-specific first aid training through Mental Health First Aid (MHFA) and has also created an employee network, SHINE: a group dedicated to providing guidance and support to workers with mental illnesses. To extend its reach last year, the network partnered with leading UK mental health charity SANE to provide support not only to State Street employees, but to their friends, families and carers as well.

MHFA and SANE both endorsed and signed the open letter to Theresa May last November, which called for the government to amend health and safety first aid regulation­s to explicitly include mental health. This is an important endeavour, which State Street wholeheart­edly supports.

State Street’s commitment to improving the lives of its employees with disabiliti­es, including mental illnesses, also earned it the title of one of the best places to work and a 100 per cent score on the latest Disability Equality Index.

While the industry is making process in regards to mental health in the workplace, there is still much work to be done. If organisati­ons actively promote good mental health among their employees, it will improve the way mental health is dealt with in the workplace and help to affect broader cultural change.

Jess Mcnicholas is managing director of inclusion, diversity and corporate citizenshi­p at State Street.

 ?? PICTURE: PHILIP COBURN/AFP/GETTY ?? 0 40 per cent of staff experience anxiety at work, says Mcnicholas
PICTURE: PHILIP COBURN/AFP/GETTY 0 40 per cent of staff experience anxiety at work, says Mcnicholas

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