Companies lack targets for employee mental health, study shows
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[October 10, 2022]
By Juliette Portala
(Reuters) - Only three companies out of 20
have published objectives for employee mental health management, a study
from British charity investment manager CCLA revealed on Monday, despite
"clear evidence" that such targets can save money.
CCLA's new investor benchmark, which assessed 100 of the world's largest
listed firms, showed a disconnect between their recognition of workers'
mental health as an important business issue and formalised public
commitments and disclosure.
"There may be no shortage of mental health initiatives in the
international workplace, but when it comes to integrating mental health
into formal management systems and processes, most global companies have
much further to go," Amy Browne, stewardship lead at CCLA, said in a
statement.
"There is clear evidence to show that improving the mental health of an
organisation saves money and that the financial ramifications of failing
to improve corporate mental health are profound," she added.
According to David Atkin, head of the U.N.-supported Principles for
Responsible Investment, the results of CCLA's benchmark show that mental
health is "still a relatively immature business issue".
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Workers walk in the City of London,
Britain, September 21, 2018. Picture taken September 21, 2018.
REUTERS/Peter Nicholls
Deloitte, one of the "Big Four"
accounting firms, reported in 2020 that mental ill-health in the
workplace cost companies on average 1,652 pounds, or $1,900 based on
mid-September exchange rate, per private sector employee each year,
CCLA cited.
"If we consider that the 100 companies in the CCLA Corporate Mental
Health Benchmark Global 100 employ almost 19 million people
worldwide, between them, that translates to $36 billion lost, each
year, to mental ill-health," Browne said.
CCLA noted, against a backdrop of surging inflation and an unfolding
cost-of-living crisis across the world, that 82% of corporates had
taken a clear stance on the relationship between good mental health
and fair pay and financial wellbeing.
Less than a third of them, however, have shared a formal policy that
expressly recognises this link.
($1 = 0.8965 pounds)
(Reporting by Juliette Portala; Editing by Carolyn Cohn and
Christian Schmollinger)
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