FUTURE TALENT March-May 2019 | Page 41

O ON TOPIC Mental health at work: ? is anyone getting it RIGHT Organisations must ‘walk the walk’ when it comes to addressing workplace mental health, and the key to success is addressing culture. he penny has finally dropped. Well, not so much dropped as drifted down slower than a feather on the Moon, but that penny – employers realising that mental health should be talked about it in the same way as physical health – has at last touched down. But it’s easy to talk a good game. If businesses are serious about improving employees’ mental health, action is needed from all those involved in developing people and culture. There’s little point in acknowledging the black dog in the room if nobody takes practical steps to usher it out the door. A recent study of 1,000 managers, C-suite executives and employees by City & Guilds Group, illustrates the problem. It found that, while 94% of businesses say they consider workplace mental safety as “important”, only one in 10 is proactively trying to improve matters. Worse still, a fifth (22%) of senior managers say they would only be motivated to take action if a “high-profile press incident occurred” – akin to saying you’d only help a drowning puppy if your children were watching. However, the tide is turning. In January 2017, the prime minister ordered an independent review into workplace mental health, led by Lord Dennis Stevenson and Paul Farmer, T March – May 2019 // 41