Creating a mentally healthy workplace

Why

91% of employees believe mental health in workplace is important, however 52% believe their workplaces are mentally unhealthy. (Beyond Blue, 2015). For every $1 invested in creating a mentally healthy workplace there is a return of $2.30. Meaning that employees are asking for help and we need to listen and response. AND there is a true business case both financially and ethically to commit to improving our workplaces. Further, the average cost of a mental health claim is 4.5 times more than a physical injury. Mental health condition claims was $24,500 compared to $9,000 for all claims, and typical time off work was 15.3 weeks compared to 5.5 weeks for all claims (Safe Work Australia, 2015). So there is a need to act as our employees are our greatest asserts, especially healthy, happy and productive employees. Failure to provide a mentally healthy workplace can lead to expensive claims and extensive time off work.

Workplace Mental Health Claims Linked to Stress

91% of workers’ compensation claims involving a mental health condition were linked to work-related stress or mental stress. The main factors leading to work related stress included: work pressure (31%), work-related harassment and/or bullying (27%) and exposure to workplace or occupational violence (14%) (Safe Work Australia, 2015).

Strategic Approach to Creating a Mentally Healthy Workplace

We need to promote, prevent, intervene early and holistically to support recovery.

1. Promote – through leadership, policies, practicing respectful interactions, encourage honest and effective communication. Increase organisational awareness of psychological health. Promote and facilitate positive psychological processes and holistic self-care practices.

2. Prevent – explore what psychosocial hazards look like in the specific industry. Create preventative practices to avoid and reduce workplace bullying and work-related violence. Explore what leads to work stress. These factors include job demands, poor support and role clarity, organisational change and poor working conditional, low recognition and poor workplace relationship/belonging and organisational justice.

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3. Intervene early – Explore initial signs of distress, support proactive interventions to enhance leadership and employees’ psychological wellbeing. Create staff development plans that include their holistic wellbeing. Select a quality EAP (employee assistance provider) than will give confidential feedback to support organisational enhancement and growth.

It is important to recognise the various signs of psychological distress. These include

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Physical – Headaches, necks, backs and chest pains, fatigue, digestive upsets and sleeping issues.

Cognitive – Difficulties with concentration, learning, retention and attention to detail, feeling indecisive, helpless, worrying or perfectionist and controlling behaviours.

Emotional – Anger, anxiety, stress, depression, moody, teary, guilt, loss of motivation, confidence and self-esteem.

Behavioural – Substance use, smoking, drugs and alcohol, increases in caffeine and food consumption, loss of pleasure in social life and hobbies, relationship stress and poor self care practices.

Holistically Supported Recovery

Develop a best practice framework and policies for managing psychological concerns, have an early intervention approach to managing psychological injuries, support employee engagement in EAP supports and recovery processes. Support staff development to create a more supportive and empathetic communication and behaviours towards other staff, enhance leadership mental health awareness and capabilities to engage in positive proactive supports.

Actions – Prevention, stigma and training.

As like most health related aspects, prevention is better than cure. As a society we need to do more to reduce stigma around mental health. Often this starts with having great levels of honesty, openness and health seeking behaviours to enhance psychological well-being. Often within my psychology practice people share with me the sad truths that they now realise how judgemental they were to others with mental health complaints. No one truly knows what is going on in people’s private lives and nor can we expect anyone else to solve or fix it. I feel very strongly that more workplaces and interested people should take an introductory course in mental health first aid. This and other short courses are invaluable, and are more likely to save lives than first aid courses, that has become compulsory for most workplaces.

My services and supports:

I am passionate about preventive holistic practices, early intervention, workplace health promotion and enhancement. Making workplace psychologically healthy and a place that enhances our health is a professional priority of mine. We spend many of our waking hours within the workplaces that we really need to make sure workplaces are feeding our growth, development and creating greater meaning in our lives. Too often I see clients who have reduced physical and psychological health due to their work.
As a Psychologist and Workplace Wellbeing Consultant, I use my Masters of Organisational Psychology Degree to consult, investigate and create intervention plans to enhance employee health, satisfaction and retention as well as organisational productivity, performance and growth. I also work as an Employee Assistant Provider (EAP), and supports staff who self-identify that they need psychological assistance. I commonly create and deliver workplace training and development sessions as well as provide coaching and mentoring to leaders and managers within organisations. With 20 years of experience working as a health professional who has run their own small business and been a finalist of the Telstra Business Women of the Year Awards, I am sure I can assist you personally or professionally regarding your work, life and business success.

Category: Psychology

5 tips to success for Mums in business

1: Identify and create professional flow:

  • Personal values, skills and strengths’
  • Business vision, purpose
  • How your business adds to meaning making in your life?
  • Is there a business case, customers base in need of your product, service?
  • Who are they, how do you reach them?

2. Explore self and delegation

  • Business aspects that need further guidance?
  • How this guidance would enhance my business?
  • Business aspects that I could delegate to someone else?
  • How delegation would enhance my business growth, my time and reduce my stress load?
  • What are keen themes regarding my self-concept and perception?
  • What are some of my self- limiting beliefs?
  • How are these aspects holding me back?
  • House duties that need to be delegated to someone else?
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3. Role modelling and self validation

  • What are you most proud of regarding your business success? How can you communicate more honestly with your friends and family about what you need for support and how you are currently feeling?
  • Create a plan (especially with your children) to improve your work and parenting practices so that children and partners feel prioritised, especially around business commitments.

4. Phones, internet, social media and parenting practices

(healthy boundaries and prioritising self and family).

  • What are you most proud of regarding your business success? How can you communicate more honestly with your friends and family about what you need for support and how you are currently feeling?
  • Create a plan (especially with your children) to improve your work and parenting practices so that children and partners feel prioritised, especially around business commitments.

5. Getting qualified guidance to grow your business, delegate and make it less reliant on yourself.

(ask and receive)

  • Ask for help, get support and speciality assistance to guide and enhance your business and personal growth. Gain clarity through guidance and regular self reflection.
  • Challenge the status quo, delegate tasks to others – be that through getting your partner and children to contribute, getting a cleaner and gardener and gaining more equality in the division of labour with the children and any domesticated chores such as shopping and cooking.
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Category: Psychology

Enhancing body Image

Strategies to support yourself and your teens

According to the Butterfly Foundation for Eating Disorders “Body image is the perception that a person has of their physical self and the thoughts and feelings that result from that perception.”
Body dissatisfaction is the top ranked issue of concern for young people (Mission Australia, 2011) but it affects all ages and gender. Body dissatisfaction can lead to an eating disorders, which unlike what stigma suggests, eating disorders are not a lifestyle choice or a cry for attention. Eating disorders are serious mental illness that have the highest mortality rate of any psychiatric illness. Many people experiencing an eating disorder suffer from depression and/or anxiety. Suicide rates for anorexia are 32 times higher than the general population (Butterfly Foundation for Eating Disorders, 2019).

Improving body image is a constructive goal that needs exploration into individual and environmental factors. In addition, respect needs to be given to genetically fixed aspects such as height, muscle composition and bone structure.

Enhancing body image is possible through holistically exploring how someone sees, feels, thinks and behaves.

Four key aspects of body image:

1. SEE (PERCEPTUAL) This is not always a true representation, EG, Perception of being overweight when they are actually underweight.

2. FEEL (AFFECTIVE)
People feel satisfied or dissatisfied about their shape, weight and individual body parts.

3. THINK (AFFECTIVE) This can lead to preoccupation with body shape and weight, in that they believe they will feel better if they are thinner or more muscular.

4. BEHAVIOURAL (COGNITIVE) Behavioural changes such as isolating oneself due to feeling bad about their appearance or employing destructive behaviours (e.g. excessive exercising, disordered eating) to change appearance.

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Helpful tips:

1. Identify and focus on positive qualities, skills and talents. Accept and appreciate your whole self. (“You are more than a physical image.”)

2. Participate in what these qualities and attributes allow you to explore and achieve in your life. “make use of your unique offering and contributions in your life and in ways that offer something to others.”

3. Engage in daily positive intentions, self-talk and behaviours that explore a variety of your talents.

4. Avoid negative or berating self-talk and “could have, would have and should have”.

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5. Focusing on appreciating and respecting what your body can do, and invest in its wellbeing through nurturing it through good nutrition, exercise and positive emotional and social connections.

6. Setting positive, health focused, lifestyle enhancing goals rather than weight loss and deficit minded approaches. Achievable, and sustainable enhancements enrich your life and offer stability and happiness you deserve.

7. Admiring others’ natural beauty and appreciating beauty in more ways than just visually can improve your own body confidence. Appreciating individual beauty verse comparing self to others visually allows us to explore ourselves as a whole, unique and talented person.

8. Many media images are unrealistic, one dimensional and represent a minority of the population. They are constructed (created often with air brushes, special effects and makeup) with a purpose and motivation in mind. Unfortunately, that is often to manipulate and motivate people into buying (consumerism) which typically does not increase people’s levels of happiness and life satisfaction.

9. Most professional programs and interventions that increase positive body image focus on reducing risk factors (e.g. thin ideal internalization, peer pressure, bullying and ‘fat talk’, perfectionism, emotional regulation) and increasing protective factors (e.g. self-esteem, social support, non-competitive physical activity, healthy eating behaviours and attitudes, respect for diversity, emotional wellbeing).

Useful resource: https://thebutterflyfoundation.org.au

Category: Psychology

Book Appointment

A gift for you

It’s essential to take care of your mental health and wellbeing.

Enter your email address to receive your FREE eBook survival kit to help you thrive. It contains:

   – 10 Ways to prioritise your mental health & wellbeing in uncertain times.

   – A printable one-page checklist to put on your refrigerator to remind you of the           strategies outlined in the eBook.

  – The answer to three questions I commonly hear in my practice.

                                                                  DOWNLOAD


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