Make mental health first aid compulsory?

Published on

Employers are required to have trained physical first aiders in their workplaces. That's great. The problem is that for most work places the greatest risk, or the most likely problems to be encountered, are around mental health not physical health. Norman Lamb MP, a campaigner around mental health and a trained mental health first aider, has put down an early day motion in the House of Commons calling for this to be addressed. It would be a great way to address some of the disparity of treatment between physical and mental health, and chisel away at the ongoing stigma surrounding the latter.

We all have mental health, just as we all have physical health, and in both cases we are on a continuum, where our health can vary day to day. It is estimated that one in four people experience a mental health issue in any given year, and that one in six employees is depressed, anxious or suffering from stress-related problems at any time. However, many of us know little about mental health. We often don’t spot the signs that a colleague, employee, or we ourselves are struggling, and this delays help and recovery.

Related Articles

Gun violence, Donald Trump, mental illness and stigma

In the wake of yet another tragic school shooting in the US, this time at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, Donald Trump took t...

Event summary: Helping partners to show that people matter

We had a great turnout at our law firm event last week, Helping partners to show that people matter, in collaboration with Fides Search. There were many...

Going green for mental health

Last year in Mental Health Awareness Week in May the Lord Mayor's This is Me in the City campaign distributed 70,000 green ribbons across 160 organisati...

HR Magazine: Mental health support is still too reactive

Workplaces need to be much more proactive about mental health, Mark O’Grady shares four ways how.

Forbes: Tackling loneliness in remote working

Our expert Amanda Okill tells Forbes what actions organisations and individuals can take.