Title: Workplace Well-being
1 Workplace Well-being Inequality ADPH
Conference May 2010
Dr Steve Boorman Director CR and Chief Medical
Adviser Royal Mail Group NHS Workforce HWB- Lead
Reviewer
2Good Work
- A tale of two post women!!
- By way of context
3Marmot Priority Objective CCreate Fair
Employment Good Work For All
- Improve access to good jobs and reduce long-term
unemployment across the social gradient - Make it easier for people disadvantaged in the
labour market to obtain and keep work - Improve quality of jobs across the social gradient
4Health inequalities and work!
- Health inequalities result from social
inequalities in the conditions in which people
are born, grow, live, work and age - Action taken to reduce health inequalities will
have economic benefits in reducing losses from
illness associated with health inequalities.
These currently account for productivity losses
(estimated 33bn/year), reduced tax revenue and
higher welfare payments (up to 32bn/yr) and
increased treatment costs (5.5bn/yr).
5Work as a harmful myth!
- Work widely perceived as noxious
- Health Risk smoking 10 packs of cigarettes per
day (Ross 1995) - Suicide in young men gt 6 months out of work is
increased 40 x (Wessely, 2004) - Suicide rate in general increased 6x in
longer-term worklessness (Bartley et al, 2005) - Health risk and life expectancy greater than many
killer diseases (Waddell Aylward, 2005) - Greater risk than most dangerous jobs
(Construction/North Sea) - Long term worklessness is one of the greatest
known risks to public health
6Working For a Healthier Tomorrow
- Dame Carol Blacks appointment and review
- Ill health among working age population has
equivalent cost of running a second NHS - Work not seen as an important clinical outcome
- Consequences of worklessness on long term health
of individual, and of family - Black built on earlier work and Marmot accepts
case that unemployment (particularly long term)
impacts on physical and mental health - Taken further Good Work protects health
7 What is our overall goal?
- Healthy engaged workforces in well-managed
organisations
- A quality product
- A high-performing resilient workforce
- Enhanced productivity
-
- Contributing to
- A well- functioning society
- UK plc
-
8Why people are off work in the UK and many other
countries
- Two-thirds of sickness absence and long-term
incapacity is due to mild and treatable
conditions - Depression, anxiety, stress-related mental health
problems (est. cost 28.3 bn in 2008) - Musculoskeletal conditions mild and often soft
tissue (est.cost 7 bn in 2007) - Poor retention in the workplace of those with
disabilities or chronic disease - Obesity and demographic shift are significant
risk factors to exacerbate
9Mental health the facts
- 1 in 6 working age adults have symptoms
associated with mental ill-health (e.g. sleep
problems, fatigue, etc) which do not meet the
criteria for diagnosis - A further 1 in 6 working age adults experience
diagnosable mental health problems (e.g.
depression, anxiety, etc) - An estimated 1-2 of the population have severe
mental health problems (e.g. schizophrenia,
bipolar disorder, etc) - 44 of people on long-term health related
benefits have a mental or behavioural disorder as
primary conditions - The Royal College of Psychiatrists Mental Health
and Work (2008) - 11.4 m days lost in 2008/09 due to
stress/depression - Mental illness causes 46 of all sickness absence
(average length of absence 28 days per case)
10 Mental health and work
- Being in work generally leads to good mental
health, self-esteem and well-being - Being out of work is associated with poor mental
health, increased likelihood of anxiety and
depression, and increased use of medication - When people return to work their mental health
and well-being generally improve - Although work can pose a risk to mental health,
the positive effects far outweigh the risks - People with mental health problems attach a high
priority to work, and work can be part of the
recovery process - Poor mental health associates with low earnings,
social exclusion, poorer physical health, child
poverty, disrupted education
11Unemployment rate by previous occupation
12 Long term conditionsSMR for 3 respiratory
diseases
TB Ca lung COPD
Long term conditions are more likely to be
work-limiting in poorer socio-economic groups
before retirement age
300 200 100
1 2 3n 3m 4 5 1 2 3m
3n 4 5 1 2 3m 3n 4 5
8.9 4.6 14.2
Ratio Unskilled manual professional
Source Office for National Statistics
SMR Standard Mortality Rate
13Marmot - Two inter related aims!
- Reduce the adversity of adverse working
conditions - Targeting interventions proportionately towards
lower socio-economic groups
14Prioritise active labour market programmes
- Integrate unemployed in to work v passive income
support - Create jobs, offer employers subsidy to offer
employment opportunities and grants for start ups - Support for retraining and reintegration
improving occupational mobility for unemployed - Improving job matching programmes to increase
success rate of at risk groups such as long term
unemployed - Evidence to date is mainly short term but is
positive for disadvantaged groups (especially
mental ill health now reflected in New Horizons
15What is Good Work?Marmot highlighted ten key
components
- Precariousness stable, risk of loss, safe
- Individual control part of decision making
- Work demands quality and quantity
- Fair employment earnings and security from
employer - Opportunities training, promotion, health,
growth - Prevents social isolation, discrimination
violence - Share information, participate in decision making
- collective bargaining, justice if conflicts
- Work/life balance
- Reintegrates sick or disabled wherever possible
- Promotes HWB psychological needs self efficacy,
self esteem, belonging and meaningfulness - Both physical and psychosocial environments
critical
16Creating better work!
- Risk assessment physical and chemical risk
factors - Shift work work time factors (eg breaks,
working hours, time control, flexibility) - Improving psychosocial workplace risk factors
- These are largely intuitive and already subject
to law
17Vital few
- Creating good work
- Psychosocial and physical work environment
critical - Lack of reward and lack of control stress risk
factor and worse for lower socio economic groups - Work environment change combined with positive
health promotion beneficial in creating health
promoting work - Preventative and rehabilitation approaches need
improvement to create health promoting work
18Leadership and Staff EngagementIs HWB Important?
- Although 80 of NHS staff felt their HWB impacted
on quality of patient care, only 40 believed
their employer cared! - We also found over 65 of staff reported coming
to work in last month feeling ill enough to
consider taking time off!
19HWB and organisational performanceThe Case for
Change
Correlation between HWB performance and outcomes
20LSE Research headlines (Value of Rude Health -
Independent evaluation)
- gt227 mil saving over 3 years, 46mil investment
- Small depot - impact equivalent to 14 extra
parcels or 2700 a day on PL - Direct link to Q of S and sales
- Maps our initiatives to our attendance
improvement flight path ie HWB interventions
did reduce SA - Since savings continued and attendance now 40
improved on base line
21Time periods 2011 - 2015
- Develop Active labour market programmes
- Improve quality of work across social gradient,
adhere to legislation and equality guidance and
ensure compliance with stress management and
well-being promotion at work - Improve security and flexibility of employment
via increased flexibility around retirement age,
and encouraging employers to adapt jobs to
accommodate especially lone parents, carers and
those with physical and mental health problems
22Time periods 2016-2020
- Widen use of Active labour market programmes to
intervene early decrease long term unemployment - Improve implementation of quality of work across
social gradient, increase job security in
employment contracts and employers adhering to
equality legislation and extending stress
management and active HWB programmes - Extend security and flexibility of employment via
continued flexibility around retirement age, and
continuing efforts for employers to adapt jobs
to accommodate especially lone parents, carers
and those with physical and mental health
problems
23Time periods beyond 2020
- Use of Active labour market programmes to achieve
timely interventions and reduce long term
unemployment - Improve quality of work across social gradient,
building in job security to employment contracts
and monitoring employers adhere to legislation
and equality guidance and monitor compliance with
stress management and well-being promotion at
work - Continue to achieve flexibility of employment via
a tax benefits system that promotes flexible
working and ensuring jobs are suitable for lone
parents, carers and those with physical and
mental health problems
24Why Health and Well-being in the NHS?We tried to
articulate a case for change seeking higher
priority for staff health
Healthy workforce essential for the NHS to meet
21st Century challenges and deliver Lord Darzis
vision of High Quality Care for All
- Rising demand driven by demographics and
increasing expectations - Imperative to deliver better quality care
- 20bn savings1 can only be delivered by a healthy
and productive workforce - Innovative approaches required to address
additional pressures on staff - Keeping communities well needs prevention as a
key workforce skill
NHS Constitution gives legal rights to
NHS cornerstone of Government response to Dame
Carol Black
- NHS should be an exemplar of workplace health
- Improving staff health can improve the health of
the general population
- Patients and public quality of care
- Staff rewarding jobs in a healthy and safe
environment
1 Source NHS Chief Executives annual report
2008/09