Insight
2024 employment law round up…and a look ahead to 2025
Discover key 2024 employment law updates, including flexible working changes, redundancy protection, and the new duty to prevent harassment.
Read moreInsight
Awareness of work-related stress has become prominent in the modern workplace. The Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) publishes an annual absence management survey, “health and wellbeing at work”, which monitors trends in absence management and considers health and wellbeing policies and practice. In 2022, with regard to stress and mental wellbeing, the survey found that:
The Health and Safety Executive defines stress as the “the adverse reaction people have to excessive pressures or other types of demand placed on them” at work.
All employers have a legal duty to take reasonable care for the safety of their employees to support mental wellbeing in the workplace. An employer must identify significant and foreseeable risks to an employee’s health to minimise the risk of harm arising in the workplace. An employer must consider any disabilities that an employee may have, affecting their ability to work.
The Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 impose the following duties on employers:
Occasionally, an employer may require specialist advice from an Occupational Health expert regarding the impact of stress in the workplace. Alternatively, the employee may prefer that a report is obtained from their own doctor. Before obtaining a report from an employee’s own doctor, the employer is obliged to obtain consent from the employee, which also entails advising them of their rights under The Access to Medical Reports Act 1988.
Medical experts are often able to advise on whether any reasonable adjustments would be likely to improve the employee’s wellbeing in the workplace. Such adjustments might include:
For those employers seeking a less formal alternative to HSE risk assessments we would recommend considering Mind’s Wellness Plan. See a link to a guide and template here.
The HSE has developed the Management Standards approach to managing the risks to employees from work-related stress. The Management Standards are six “main areas of work design” (demands, control, support, relationships, role and change) which, if not properly managed, are associated with poor health, lower productivity and increased accident and sickness absence rates. For a practical guide to applying the management standards, follow this link here.
Employers that do not have their own mental health resources may wish to use those created by Mind, the mental health charity. The site contains documents, guides, tips, videos, courses, podcasts, templates and information, all aimed at workplace mental health.
See link to the relevant web page here.
Contact Us
For legal HR advice including discrimination and disciplinaries, contact our team on 01332 226 155 or complete the form below.
Related Services
Knowledge