Learn about mental health and safety in the workplace and find resources to promote mental health at work for employees.
With Canadians spending more than half of their waking hours at work, promoting good mental health in the workplace is important. Employers can play a significant role in promoting positive mental health for their employees, whether working from home or at the workplace.
Mental health promotion is an approach that goes beyond the focus on risk factors for mental illness and seeks to create and support conditions that enhance positive mental health, resiliency, social belonging, and knowledge and access to mental health resources. It works to increase the strengths and competencies that individuals and communities already possess. Mental health promotion is for everyone.
The workplace can help or hinder psychological well-being. A psychologically healthy and safe workplace is one that actively works to promote employee mental well-being and does not harm employee mental health through negligent, intentional or reckless ways. Workplaces that implement systems and processes to avoid risk to psychological health and safety can be create a supportive environment for the employee. As more workplaces adopt remote working policies, organizations have an important role to play in ensuring that psychological health and safety extends beyond the physical workplace.
The National Standard of Canada for Psychological Health and Safety in the Workplace (the Standard) (external link) can help workplaces promote mental health and prevent psychological harm at work.
The Standard is a set of voluntary guidelines, tools and resources intended to guide organizations in creating or maintaining a psychologically healthy and safe workplace. It focuses on mental illness prevention and mental health promotion. Implementing the standard can benefit everyone, regardless of whether or not they live with mental illness.
Watch this video from the Mental Health Commission of Canada (MHCC) to learn more about the Standard and why it is important to take action today (YouTube link)
A work environment where there is recognition of the need for employees to be able to manage the demands of work, family and personal life.
A work environment where all employees including management are respectful and considerate in their interactions with one another, as well as with customers, clients and the public.
A work environment where there is effective leadership and support so that employees know what they need to do, have confidence in their leaders and understand impending changes.
In a work environment where there is positive engagement, employees are motivated to do their job well and feel connected to their work, co-workers, and organization.
A work environment where employees receive encouragement and support in the development of their interpersonal, emotional and job skills.
A work environment where employees are included in discussions about how their work is done and have input into decisions that impact their job.
A work environment characterized by the shared values of trust, honesty, fairness and accountability.
A work environment where management takes appropriate action to address physical hazards in order to protect the psychological health and safety of workers.
A work environment where the organization is supportive of employees' psychological health concerns and provides assistance as needed.
A work environment where there is good fit between employees’ interpersonal and emotional competencies, their job skills and the position they hold.
A work environment where employees’ psychological safety is ensured through policies and, employees are free from bullying, harassment, stigma and discrimination.
A work environment where there is appropriate acknowledgement and appreciation of employees’ efforts in a fair and timely manner.
A work environment where assigned tasks and responsibilities can be accomplished successfully within the time available.
The Standard recommends that organizations implement a Psychological Health and Safety Management System (PHSMS) for assessing how policies, processes and interactions in the workplace might impact the psychological health and safety (PH&S) of employees. A PHSMS helps an organization identify hazards that can contribute to psychological harm to the worker. It is a preventive approach that assesses your workplace’s practices and identifies those areas of concern. When concerns are noted, the organization must suggest strategies for preventive measures that are anticipated to reduce potential harm or eliminate hazards. It should be noted that the implementation of a PHSMS is intended to promote positive mental health and prevent harm to employee mental health, not to diagnose and/or provide intervention for mental illness.
MHCC has created an implementation guide to support workplaces with implementing the Standard.
Assembling the Pieces: An implementation guide to the national standard for psychological health and safety in the workplace (external link)
This is a step-by-step resource for the Standard. This toolkit provides practical advice for implementing key elements of the Standard, and links to tools that will assist organizations to take action towards implementation. It is geared toward senior leaders, human resource managers, and occupational health and safety professionals. It offers a roadmap to implementation of the Standard.