Stress is still a major concern for UK employers

-

A Global Survey of Health Promotion and Workplace Wellness Strategies conducted by bucks consultants, found that 72% of UK respondents are very concerned about the effect of stress on their workforce. These findings on stress, however, are lower than the results for 2009.

Lack of physical activity and poor nutritional habits immediately follow stress as the most important concerns for UK participants when thinking about their employees’ health (60% and 58% respectively).

Of the 1,200 organisations surveyed, 63% highlighted an Employee Assistance Programme (EAP) as one of the most common tools for stress management within their organisation. Although workplace wellness programmes were found to be growing in popularity, initiatives measuring the effectiveness of these programmes remains low.

The top objectives for implementing a UK workplace wellness strategy remain the same as those in 2009: improving productivity and reducing absence. The survey also revealed a significant increase in the importance placed by participants on the need to comply with legislation, further organisational values and increase corporate social responsibility activities.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

Given the focus on smoking cessation in recent years, the results also showed that smoking is seen as a much less important health risk for participants, but substance abuse has become a bigger issue, with 55% of respondents saying that this was a concern.

Mike Tyler, UK managing director, Health & Productivity at Buck Consultants, said: “Workforce stress levels are at the forefront of UK employers’ minds. At the same time, we see a rise in employers’ recognition of the benefits of a workplace wellness strategy and their increasing appetite to implement one.

“We see room for improvement in measuring the effectiveness of a wellness strategy in order to identify the particular challenges each employer will face. Organisations that measure the impact of their workplace wellness strategy are more successful at improving their employees’ health, thereby impacting productivity, absence and engagement. However, we recognise that many employers simply don’t know how to measure their results or they don’t have the resources to do so.”

Latest news

Sustainable business starts with people, not HR policies

Why long-term success depends on supporting employees, not just meeting ESG targets, with practical steps for leaders to build healthier organisations.

Hiring steadies but Gulf crisis threatens recovery in UK jobs market

UK hiring shows signs of stabilising, but rising global uncertainty linked to the Gulf crisis is weighing on employer confidence and delaying recovery.

Women ‘face career setback’ risk with flexible working

Female staff using remote or reduced-hour arrangements more likely to move into lower-status roles, raising concerns about bias in career progression.

Jo Kansagra: Make work benefits work for Gen Z

Gen Z employees are entering the workforce at full steam, and yet many workplace benefits schemes are firmly stuck in the past.
- Advertisement -

Union access plans risk straining workplace relations, CIPD warns

Proposed rules on workplace access raise concerns about employer readiness and operational strain.

Petra Wilton on managers struggling with new workplace laws

“Managers are not being given the tools they need to fully understand how the rules of the workplace are changing.”

Must read

Arran Heal: How to transform a ‘bystander culture’ 

"The bystander culture is a common enough feature of organisations of all shapes and sizes."

Matthew Raybould: Why focusing on ‘health’ is just as important as ‘safety’

As research is released suggesting that almost half (44 per cent) of UK workers know somebody who has given up work because of stress, Matthew Raybould, operations director in the South Midlands at construction company Willmott Dixon, explores what companies can do to ensure staff wellbeing remains at a high.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you