According
to the latest figures from the Health and Safety Executive
(HSE):
About half a million people in the UK experience work-related
stress at a level they believe is making them ill
up to 5 million people in the UK feel 'very' or 'extremely'
stressed by their work
work-related stress costs society about £3.7 billion
every year (at 1995/6 prices)
As
well as acting as an unnecessary drain on the economy,
workplace stress is also the subject of increasing
government legislation:
Many
employers do not realise that since the publication
of the Management of Health & Safety at Work Regulations
(1999), all organisations with five or more employees
have had a legal duty to conduct regular risk assessments
of workplace hazards including psychosocial hazards
such as stress.
These assessments should then be used to identify
and either avoid or reduce such hazards.
A written health policy is also mandatory for all
firms with five or more employees, and this should
include a stress and bullying & harassment policy.
On 3 November 2004, the HSE published its new Management
Standards for work-related stress - designed to help
ensure that organisations address key aspects of workplace
stress (or 'risk factors') including demands, control,
support, relationships, role and change.
While the Standards themselves do not impose a legal
duty on organisations, breach of the applicable regulations
could lead to criminal prosecution, or claims for
compensation through the civil courts.
What
do the Management Standards cover?
For
each risk factor, the Management Standards include
a description of what should be happening in an organisation
(or 'states to be achieved') in order for the Standard
to be met. 'Demands', for example, includes issues
like workload, work patterns and the work environment.
States to be achieved are that:
The
organisation provides employees with adequate and
achievable demands in relation to the agreed hours
of work
People's skills and abilities are matched to the job
demands
Jobs are designed to be within the capabilities of
employees
Employees' concerns about their work environment are
addressed
So
what should employers do?
The
Management Standards are all about highlighting potential
areas of stress, and encouraging employers to take
action to reduce these - with the goal of matching
the performance of the top 20% of organisations that
are already doing this. If you think your organisation
may be experiencing problems due to workplace stress,
it will therefore need to take a proactive approach
to tackling it:
Many
organisations face deadline pressures or sudden changes
in work demands, and employees need the necessary
training and experience to meet the ever-increasing
demands made on them. Examples include training in
resilience, time management, communication skills,
and - for managers in particular - stress awareness
enabling them to recognise the early warning signs
of stress in themselves and others.
Where employees have been forced to take time away
from work as a result of stress, their rehabilitation
back to work needs to be carefully managed.
For those employees who require specialist support,
Employee Assistance Programmes and counselling services
are a vital component in employee well being.
Training in communication (and particularly active
listening) skills is essential to help ensure that
managers are aware of their team members' problems
and in a position to offer early interventions to
resolve these.
Ultimately,
reducing workplace stress is largely a matter of common
sense and good management practice, and simply requires
employers and employees to work together for the common
good. Both share a joint responsibility for reducing
stress - which, when this is successful, can help
employees to enjoy their work more, and businesses
to thrive as a result.
For
informed advice on the HSE's new Management Standards
for work-related stress, or to receive CSG's FREE
Special Report explaining their implications - 'HSE
'Management Standards on Stress - made simple', please
email: sb@carolespiersgroup.com .
Carole
Spiers Group
International Stress Management & Employee Wellbeing
Consultancy
Gordon House, 83-85 Gordon Avenue, Stanmore, Middlesex
HA7 3QR
Tel: 020 8954 1593 Fax: 020 8907 9290
Email: info@carolespiersgroup.com www.carolespiersgroup.com
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