A shift from health and safety to wellness
Since the late 1990s, employers realised that wellness is affected by much more than just physical fitness and began to tackle mental and emotional health as well. At first, available services and their uptake was limited and stigma around mental ill-health remained a barrier. In 2020, the COVID‑19 pandemic disrupted the wellness industry, and mental health support went from a “nice-to-have” to a true business imperative.
In 2024 the stakes are being raised, thanks to increasing awareness of the workplace factors that can contribute to poor mental health, as well as heightened urgency around its intersections with diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI).4
Employee mental health services have become a billion-dollar industry, offering a diverse array of services, including digital wellness solutions, mindfulness seminars, massage classes, resilience workshops, coaching sessions, and sleep apps. The goal is to promote wellbeing and support employees’ mental health.
Some programmes have shown success. A 2022 study tracked U.S. workers using a platform that connected employees with mental health services such as therapy and medication management. It found that 69.3% of participants showed improvement in their mood, and participants also missed fewer days of work and reported higher productivity.5
However, improving employee mental health is not as simple as it may seem. A cross-sectional study analysed survey data from 46,336 workers across 233 organisations in the UK and compared various individual-level wellbeing interventions. These included resilience training, coaching, mindfulness, relaxation classes, courses in time management or financial health, and wellbeing apps. The study found no difference in wellbeing indicators in the test group who engaged with the programmes compared to those who did not participate in any interventions.6
The study acknowledges that it did not examine the long-term impact of the interventions, but one takeaway message was clear: all the interventions were at an individual level and did not provide additional or appropriate resources in response to job demands. This emphasises the importance of broader approaches that address working conditions alongside individual-level interventions, e.g. core organisational cultural practices such as working hours, schedules, workload, renumeration, and performance reviews.
This two-fold approach was supported by 2021 research by Harvard Business Review7 which found that 84% of survey respondents reported at least one workplace factor that negatively impacted their mental health. Researchers found that “the most common factor was emotionally draining (e.g. stressful, overwhelming, boring, or monotonous) work, which had worsened since the COVID‑19 pandemic. This was closely followed by work-life balance. The other workplace factors that most notably worsened since the pandemic were poor communication practices and a low sense of connection to or support from one’s colleagues or manager, perhaps unsurprising in a predominantly remote workforce.”8
Jamil Zaki, Associate Professor of Psychology at Stanford University, believes that empathy is key. His research found that employees who believe their organisations and managers are empathic, report less burnout and greater mental health, and call in sick due to stress-related illness less often.9
Hallmarks of Effective Corporate Wellness Programmes