Friday, 10 December 2010

Mental Health 2010 - Review of the Year 2010 part 1

The background

Carol Black's 2008 report 'Working for a Healthier Tomorrow' was a round-up and reinforcement of the initiatives embodied in the Disability Discrimination Act (DDA), designed to address key concerns around health and legal rights in the workplace.

Major businesses and business organisations have also addressed the massive loss to the economy and to human happiness that can be caused by mental ill-health.  In 2005 the Confederation of British Industry was concerned enough to commission its own research. Business owners and directors have not been slow in following the confederation's lead.

The year 2010

Supported by business ‘dragon’ Duncan Bannatyne, Mind’s ‘Taking care of Business’ campaign continues to highlight the initiatives being taken by many employers around issues of mental health at work. Some of the companies who signed up to support the Mind campaign include EDF energy, BT, Hewitt Consultancy, AXA and police and security services. Hewitt Associates helped set up an Employee Assistance programme allowing staff access to counselling services where appropriate.

Anti-stigma group Shift is also 'high visibility' in its tireless campaigning for an end to mental health discrimination and in its promotion of understanding the need to support good mental health in the workplace.

Equality Act

The increasing awareness of how mental health affects us all culminated in 2010 with the Equality Act.

The Act reinforces all the implementations of the Disability Discrimination Act (DDA) and in particular, the rights of employees who have disclosed a mental health condition. Before the act came into force, employees had the legal right to reasonable adjustments in their working conditions where appropriate. With the Equality Act, the burden of proof now lies with the employer to show that adjustments have been made rather than with the employee to prove they haven't. It is a highly significant rights-based change.

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