Are there specific signs or symptoms I should be looking out for proactively?
Front line managers are most closely in touch with employees on a regular basis and likely the first to notice a change in an employee’s mood, attitude and activity pattern. Some signals that an employee may be in need of mental health care are uncharacteristic anger, a negative attitude, a consistent change in job performance, an uptick in safety issues or accidents, insubordination, lack of cooperation, resistance to help, poor concentration (which can cause incidents of other kinds), withdrawal, depression, or talking about self-harm or suicide. If a change is noticed, the time to act is now. HUB can help you integrate mental health check-ins and factors to watch for with your safety and risk observations.
What are some easy steps to start addressing mental health needs in my organization?
Any step you take to receive additional tools, resources and information is a good first step to integrating mental health into your company’s overall safety protocol. Remember, doing something is far better than doing nothing – the industry is in need! Open lines of well-being communication and awareness across the entire company to build trust, tackle stigma, teach stress management and offer immediate support resources such as peer check-ins. Employees need to know that their employer is paying attention, wants to help and is able to provide the resources needed. Equally important, leadership within your organization should be trained in how to address employee mental health care needs. For additional and immediate tools and resources, reach out to HUB, your employee assistance program (EAP) provider, the Construction Industry Alliance for Suicide Prevention (CIASP) and Living Works to get started.