* In both groups, more than half agree that their organisation talks more about mental health now. However, this has not resulted in any significant impact on employees.
* Also in both groups, around 35% of respondents said they wouldn’t feel comfortable talking openly with their line manager about feeling stressed or anxious or about other mental health problems.
“46% of Generation Z and 45% of millennials feel burned out due to the intensity/demands of their work environments.”
The current social and economic context is forcing companies around the world to change their approach to wellbeing. Strengthening the mental health of workers is the great challenge of coming times. According to the World Health Organisation, 12 billion working days are lost each year due to depression and anxiety alone. Two conditions that cost the global economy 1 trillion dollars every year, mainly through reduced productivity.
Is it possible to take care of mental health at work?
A Sonder research on employee wellbeing found that 80% of respondents were more open about their emotions or concerns when leaders talked about their own. And 92% said that support for mental health and wellbeing was an important factor when considering a change of employer.
While organisations have responded with initiatives such as implementing an emotional leadership model, flexible working arrangements or creating workspaces that care for the well-being of employees, more can still be done to ensure safe and healthy working environments.
Change in organisational culture (from top to bottom)
This is not an easy challenge to meet. Not only because companies may or may not be able to give workers’ well-being the importance it truly deserves, but also because, even if this part is well articulated, each person is different when it comes to expressing, caring for, understanding their own mental health and understanding their needs. In other words, the challenge lies in identifying and naming emotions, and also in designing strategies that work on long-term problems.
For this reason, leaders considering mental health at work as an organisational priority and establishing mechanisms to help them understand how their team members are doing may be one of the keys to the issue. When managers seek to be open and share their personal experience, they’re often able to foster an environment of trust and transparency.
“92% of employees indicated that support for mental health and wellbeing was an important factor when considering a change of employer.”
Fear and shame are often two barriers to discussing emotional issues or moods at work. Achieving an organisational culture where these issues can be talked about free of stigma will ensure that mental health problems are addressed more effectively, preventing them from leading to more complex situations.