Pressure has been building on workplaces to provide physically as well as psychologically healthy
Pressure has been building on workplaces to provide physically as well as psychologically healthy and safe workplaces,” says WSPS Consultant Krista Schmid. “Many employers are talking about it and wondering what to do.”
Among the solutions: tapping into the in-house expertise of your own joint health and safety committee (JHSC). “They’re ideally positioned to act as champions of mental health,” says Krista. They can help the employer reduce stigma and pinpoint psychological hazards in the workplace.
Interest in this area is growing rapidly, and in some proactive workplaces JHSCs are already incorporating mental health into their workplace duties. WSPS is highlighting some of these companies in a new training course that educates JHSCs and provides useful tools for preventing harm to mental health. Dr. Martin Shain, Canada’s leading expert on workplace mental health,1 was instrumental in the development of WSPS’ new course.
Workplace pressure points
Factors compelling employers to address mental health include:
The JHSC's role
Reducing mental health harm involves “looking at how workplace factors such as culture, organization of work, and workplace relationships and interactions are impacting workers’ mental health,” explains Krista.
JHSCs are well suited to root out workplace factors.2 For instance, JHSCs:
How WSPS can help
The following resources could help your JHSC members reduce psychological harm in the workplace by becoming mental health ambassadors or champions:
This article was prepared by Workplace Safety & Prevention Services (WSPS). For more information, visit www.wsps.ca or contact WSPS at [email protected].
1 Dr. Shain discusses the emerging legal duty on employers in his report Weathering the Perfect Legal Storm. This report gave rise to the CSA standard, Psychological Health and Safety in the Workplace - Prevention, Promotion, and Guidance to Staged Implementation (CSA-Z1003-13), which provides employers with a framework for assessing and addressing psychological health and safety in their workplace.
2 Find out more about the 13 psychosocial factors that can cause psychological health problems at Guarding Minds at Work.