Wellbeing and health slip down the agenda despite Covid persisting

A new report suggests mental health and wellbeing are slipping down the agenda for senior managers despite Covid’s impact continuing to reverberate on people’s health.

Older woman works at laptop with facemask on

 

Wellbeing and mental health are beginning to slip down the business agenda, according to a new report, despite the fact that organisations are still dealing with the fallout from Covid-19 and it remains an on-going concern for workers.

The Health and Wellbeing at Work 2022 report from the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development and Simplyhealth reveals that the number of HR professionals who think that wellbeing is on the agenda of senior leaders has fallen from 75% to 70% in the past year. There has also been a drop in the proportion of HR professionals who think senior leaders encourage a focus on mental wellbeing through their actions and behaviours, falling from 48% in 2021 to 42% in 2022.

The report also shows there has been a decrease in respondents who say managers have bought into the importance of wellbeing, dropping from 67% in 2021 to 60% for 2022.

Nevertheless, the report notes that Covid will continue to impact workers for some time and needs to be factored into organisational plans, particularly with regards to effective mental health support and helping people with long Covid, which seems to affect older women more than others.

The research, which 804 HR professionals were surveyed for, representing more than 4.3 million employees, show two thirds (66%) of HR professionals are concerned about the impact of the pandemic on employees’ mental health – and nearly a quarter (24%) of HR professionals also state Covid-related anxiety is among the top-three causes of workplace stress in their organisation.

Rachel Suff, senior employment relations adviser at the CIPD, the professional body for HR and people development, said:  “Not only is Covid still with us, it has exacerbated existing health and wellbeing challenges and created new ones, like long Covid. So while the drop may be small at this point, it’s still a concern that some senior leaders are starting to pay less attention to health and wellbeing – particularly when the last two years have proven how important it is to organisational resilience.

“Senior leaders have a defining influence on their organisation’s culture and it’s in their gift to shape an environment where people feel safe to speak up about health issues and seek support.”

The report shows that levels of stress – which organisations have long grappled with – still remain high, with 79% of respondents reporting some form of stress-related absence in their organisation last year, rising to 90% for large organisations.

Unhealthy trends linked to poor wellbeing are commonplace too: 67% of respondents are aware of some form of leaveism (such as using annual leave to work) in their organisation and 81% say they have observed presenteeism (working when ill) among those working from home.



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