Chapter 3 Employers, employees and workplaces
The broader diversity in participation and skill shortages is
what will sell [employing or retaining an employee with a mental illness] to
the employer.[1]
Employers could be missing out on potentially valuable employees
through misconceptions and stereotypes of people with a mental illness.[2]
Everybody is potentially one major life crisis away from
becoming quite unwell. All employees are a bit of a risk and everybody with a
mental illness has potentially, with the right support and a good network, a
way of getting everything back on track and being able to be a contributing member
of society in that respect.[3]
3.1
Some of the major barriers to participation in employment for people
with a mental health condition include stigma, fear and ignorance amongst
employers and co-workers, and inflexible and inappropriate working
arrangements.
3.2
Many witnesses reflected on the need for employers to be more receptive to
and supportive of employing and retaining employees with a mental health
condition by offering flexible working arrangements. They argued this can be
achieved through greater education to counter negative stereotypes, incentives
and access to other appropriate supports and services, on an as-required basis.[4]
Beyondblue stated:
There is a lot of misconceptions out there about mental
health problems and understanding of people’s ability to undertake employment,
so employers and managers often do not know what to do. They just do not have
the practical strategies necessary to know how to support someone who is
experiencing difficulties.[5]
3.3
Dr Aaron Groves, General Manager, Queensland Department of Employment,
Economic Development and Innovation emphasised the need to tackle stigma in
workplaces and stated that governments should support this endeavour. He spoke
of the need to overturn commonly held assumptions by employees that having
someone with a mental illness at their workplace would entail more work for
them. He indicated this is hardly ever the case and that a person with a mental
illness will work just as well, if not better than a person without a mental
illness, especially if they are getting good treatment for their illness and
the workplace is adequately prepared to deal with any issues should they become
unwell.[6]
3.4
Moreover, businesses and organisations need to promote mental health,
wellbeing and resilience as essential components of a healthy workplace and
workforce.[7] This is the
responsibility of both employers and employees.
3.5
While the Committee heard much from the supply side of the employment equation
(people with mental ill health and employment service providers) about what
employers might do better, they heard fewer first-hand accounts from the demand
side (the employers). However, the demand side of the equation is of primary
importance to achieving participation. What employers think about employing or
retaining staff with mental health conditions, what is being and can be done to
utilise this resource, and what additional supports, if any, employers think they
require provides a focus for this chapter.
Productivity and inclusivity benefits of increased participation
3.6
Chapter one referred to the need to redress an ageing workforce and
remedy workforce shortages in Australia, especially to service the growing
resources sector.
3.7
On workforce shortages, Mr Stephen Bolton, Senior Advisor, Employment,
Education and Training, ACCI observed:
Despite some of the economic doom and gloom that is affecting
some sectors of the economy at the moment, there are still pockets of fairly
significant skills and even labour shortages out there at the moment. Enhancing
workforce participation is going to be one of the great challenges over the
next 10-15 years if we are to meet the full gamut of work that is in the pipeline,
especially in the resources sector, and across the broader industry as we move
into economic recovery.[8]
3.8
Mr Bolton added that keeping good staff is a priority:
...the costs associated with re-employment are enormous...
unemployment levels are so low, people want to hold on to good staff.
They...are much more aware of things that can be done within their workplace
environment that will keep good people at work while also welcoming more good
people who may be living with a disabling illness.[9]
3.9
Plotting a path between the need to find more skilled labour and a
willing cohort of people wanting to enter the workforce requires learning more
from employers about how to best match the interests of both groups.
3.10
Given the workforce shortages and a commensurate need for creative
solutions to fill them, it was disappointing to not receive more evidence from
employer associations and employers. However, the Committee is grateful for the
evidence it received from the following employer associations and companies:
the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ACCI); Chamber of Commerce and
Industry of Western Australia (CCI WA); Abigroup Construction, Rio Tinto and
Dampier Salt.
3.11
ACCI acknowledged upfront that the economic case for greater participation
of people with a disability is strong but noted that it is imperative to
develop ‘a business case on the productivity and workforce benefits of
increasing participation.’[10]
3.12
ACCI said that it is not that employers need convincing about the
importance of a total participation and diversity agenda per se, rather ‘how to
get proper engagement’ and traction on the issue, at the same time as
recognising that:
At the end of the day it is the productivity, profitability
and sustainability of businesses that allows the investment in equity issues.[11]
3.13
Further, it may more useful to consider mental health as a subset of a
broader inclusivity approach:
Encouraging a culture of open-mindedness, encouraging a
culture of understanding or greater awareness, and most importantly,
encouraging the proper networking between the supply and the demand side.[12]
Concerns about employees’ reduced productivity
3.14
ACCI cited concerns that employers may have about the reduced
productivity of employees with a mental health condition:
Having mental health issues can effect productivity in the
workforce and it can have an adverse effect on motivation and your engagement
in the workforce. You become more inclined to absenteeism and drop out; then
once you are out of the workforce that is then compounded by some of the esteem
issues that are related to not being in the workforce, and so it then spirals
down in ever-diminishing circles, until you, effectively, totally disengage
from the workforce.[13]
3.15
CCI WA concurred and suggested that employers, especially small business
employers, may worry about the reliability of employees with a mental health
condition.[14]
3.16
It should be noted that the perception or stereotype of someone with a
mental health condition as being less productive or more unpredictable in their
behaviour exists in the broader community, not just workplaces.
3.17
SANE Australia and other witnesses indicated that every workplace has
someone with a mental illness, and that many cases are simply not disclosed.
SANE Australia refuted the stereotype that:
...everyone with a mental illness is very severely disabled
and unable to work. That is very, very far from the truth.[15]
3.18
Ms Bernette Redwood, Executive Officer, Vista Vocational Services said
that another misnomer is that people with a mental illness are permanently
unwell. She referenced her own illness and periods of being unwell, at the same
time as noting that she had held management positions for 20 years.[16]
3.19
The Australian Human Rights Commission referred to an Australian Safety
and Compensation Council (now Safe Work Australia) review that found that
employees with a disability, including those with mental ill health, were no
riskier than other employers. In fact, the contrary was true ‘Employees with
disability have lower number of OHS incidents and lower workers’ compensation
costs.’[17]
3.20
Ms Sarah Reece, Participant, PHaMs West Program, cautioned against
making assumptions and typecasting employees with a mental illness:
I guess to a certain extent, from my perspective, a person
without a diagnosis of mental illness is not necessarily any less at risk of
becoming unwell or having a major life crisis. I do not really see myself as
being at high risk. Considering that I have lived with my particular
conditions for a long time and I have demonstrated an excellent ability to
manage them, I look at my situation and go “I am lower risk”. I have come
through major life crises. I have been homeless, I have experienced domestic
violence. I have come through all sorts of stuff, I am still here. That means I
have some pretty good skills at managing my stuff...[18]
3.21
Ms Jennifer Lambert, Director, Employment, Education and Training, ACCI
stated that there needs to be a broader picture of success to mitigate against
negative attitudes and stereotypes about people with a mental illness in the
workforce:
We need to have a broader amount of knowledge. We have
participation statistics, numbers on disability support pensions, the types of
disabilities and mental health issues out there, but we actually do not have a
picture of where success happens. We only have a limited case-study picture of
where success happens.[19]
Government invests a great deal of money in disability
service providers but yet most employers are not aware of DES, nor is the
employment of people with mental health a mainstream issue.[20]
Social enterprises versus open employment
A social enterprise is a not-for-profit business venture that
trades for a social purpose...A social firm is one type of social enterprise
and has the employment of people with a mental illness or disability as its
purpose. Any modifications required for the employee in need of support are
built into the design of the workplace.[21]
3.22
There are two types of social firms. The first type employs people in a
long term capacity and the second operates more as a transitional employment
experience whereby employees gain skills for entry into the open workforce. The
Commonwealth contributes funding to both kinds of social firms.
3.23
Essentially, social firms are supportive work environments that:
n employ between 25%
and 50% of employees with a mental illness or disability;
n pay all workers at
award/productivity based rates;
n provide the same work
opportunities, rights and obligations to all employees; [and]
n generate the majority
of … income through the commercial activity of the business although grants and
subsidies may be needed to be used to off-set loss of productivity.[22]
3.24
Traditionally, social enterprises have focused on the services industry.
Ms Caroline Crosse, Executive Director, Social Firms Australia (SoFA) said:
The social firms that we have established, or have supported
the establishment of, so far are in the more labour intensive types of business
that are easier to start up- cleaning, maintenance, recycling, a nursery, a
cafe...[23]
3.25
Other witnesses referred to similar businesses. Ms Bernette Redwood,
Executive Officer, Vista Vocational Services spoke to the successes they have
in placing work-ready clients (who are stable on their medication) in their
horticulture business and Cafe Pazzini in the ACT[24].
WISE Employment referred to social enterprises they operate in Victoria and
Tasmania, including cleaning and maintenance services.[25]
3.26
SoFA referred to the evolution of social enterprises and their own
expansion plans for the future:
Five e-waste social firms will be launched later this year
and a couple of organisations are looking at buying businesses, and we are
looking at hotels or maybe a supermarket. [26]
3.27
SoFA added that the new Commonwealth Social Enterprise Development and
Investment Fund (SEDIF) is a welcome addition to government funding.[27]
3.28
The $4 million SEDIF does not disburse grants but rather, ‘provides
flexible, tailored financial products and support to social enterprises’. Run
by fund managers, Foresters Community Finance and Social Enterprise Finance
Australia, the intention is to attract further investors into the funds to
increase the pool of capital and support available to social enterprises.[28]
3.29
In practice this might mean:
n flexible financing to
extend the operations of a restaurant training young people so it can take on
more trainees, open another site or develop a catering business thereby
increasing training and employment opportunities; or
n a loan to purchase or
grow the operations of business which employs people with disabilities or
mental illness.[29]
3.30
The Committee visited a number of social enterprises during the course
of the inquiry. These included Outlook Environmental, which runs innovative
state of the art waste transfer sites at Mornington, Knox, Hampton Park, Hume
and Reservoir in Victoria; [30] the Madcap cafe in
Dandenong and the Central Coast Laundry in Gosford.
Madcap cafe – a transitional employment model
‘I used to exist, now I’ve got a life’ – John
‘I am a taxpayer again and I’m very proud of that. I’m well
enough to be a good worker at Ermha (Eastern Regions Mental Health Association)
and Madcap cafe and now Gloria Jeans.’ –Diana
3.31
The MadCap project has been a recipient of Innovation Fund funding, a
federal government grants program that fosters innovative solutions to
overcoming the multiple barriers that can often be faced by the most
disadvantaged job seekers, including people with a mental illness. Mad cap
aims to develop a not-for-profit franchising model which can be replicated
across Australia.[31]
3.32
The Committee visited an established Madcap Cafe site in the Westfield
Fountain Gates Shopping Centre in Dandenong, Victoria. Of all the social
enterprises it visited, the Committee was perhaps most struck by the Madcap
cafe model, for the benefits it had conferred on participants and because of
its focus on transitioning participants into open employment.
3.33
At the Madcap cafe in Dandenong workers told their personal stories and
spoke to how the program had, quite powerfully, changed their lives for the
better. These changes included markedly improved self-esteem, confidence and
physical health, improved financial situations and improved relationships and
social networks.
3.34
John relayed how he had started with Ermha seven years ago, after having
been out of work for 20 years. Prior to his time at Ermha, he had weighed 150 kilograms,
was a smoker and worried about losing his disability pension should he venture
into employment and have it not work out. He described how in his time with
Ermha he had built confidence as an employee and person. He said that he had lost
a considerable amount of weight and stopped smoking. He had also recently
completed a half marathon and saved for his first car.[32]
3.35
Madcap is an Ermha Initiative,[33] supported by DEEWR and
other partners, that provides work opportunities for people with mental health
conditions, who live in and around the City of Greater Dandenong and the shires
of Casey and Cardinia in Victoria.[34]
3.36
The website describes how the Madcap transitional employment traineeship
works in practice:
The starting point for Madcap participants is the Aspirations
Day Program. This program specialises in group work, social, recreational and
vocational focused activities (this may take weeks or months...all training is
self paced and tailored to the individual).
Then comes the Barista Training program (a 4-day accredited
course in Dandenong) and work at a MadCap Café for six months.
Having gained the skills and confidence at Aspirations, the
Barista Training and MadCap, participants are supported and encouraged to
branch out and seek work in the wider community.[35]
3.37
At all stages, a support worker helps participants manage transition
points, so called because they are recognised as times at which problems might occur.
At the completion of their training Madcap works with trainees to help them
secure jobs in the open marketplace by linking them with Job Services Australia
(JSA) or Disability Employment Service (DES) for job placements.[36]
3.38
Beyond providing jobs, MadCap aims to improve the mental health of its
participants by:
Providing people with opportunities to participate in
supportive networks while engaging in meaningful, skill and confidence building
activities....The Madcap Venture seeks to ensure that people with mental health
problems have the same opportunities for participation [and social inclusion]
as everybody else. [37]
3.39
Interestingly, Madcap’s approach to workplace modifications is to ‘avoid
accommodating the illness as much as possible’. This means:
Us[ing] modern cognitive behaviour therapy methods to provide
challenges that are designed to be achievable but that also ask the trainees to
“take the next step” ... This might mean encouraging a trainee to complete a
shift when they would rather leave [ by pointing out the consequences of that
action for themselves and the business].[38]
3.40
The program also works to demystify and destigmatise mental illness in
the community:
Macdcap wants to help reframe stereotypes about mental
illness that are deeply entrenched in our culture. A mental illness can mask a
person’s abilities but those abilities still exist.
A mental illness can be persistent but that does not mean it
is necessarily intractable.
A mental illness is an individual condition and each person
with a mental illness will experience it in his or her own way.[39]
3.41
As part of its broader strategy to reframe the stereotypes about people
with a mental ill health, the Madcap cafe is intentionally located in the
‘economic heartland of busy shopping malls.’
We create contemporary feel-good arenas, with great food,
beverages and service, which not only drives business to our cafe (and Madcap
cafes are first and foremost businesses competing with many other businesses
for the public’s food and beverage dollar) but also puts mental illness in a
new light. The result is a message that tells our trainees that they are
valued, shows our customers that mental illness is not so scary, and ultimately
becomes the antidote to negative headlines about people with a mental illness.[40]
Benefits of social enterprises
3.42
As well as the many social benefits of social enterprises, Madcap points
to the financial gains, not just for the individuals employed, but also for taxpayers.
This is because the Madcap concept is focused on getting participants off the
DSP and into mainstream employment. Madcap claims it is saving the government
some $6 million over 10 years by employing 80 people at 15 hours per annum and
20 people at 30 hours per annum.[41]
3.43
Peter Waters, CEO of Ermha indicated that 116 participants had found
short term jobs and 118 found long term jobs during a two year period of Jobs
Fund funding.[42]
3.44
A number of witnesses spoke to the benefits of social firms. Boystown
cited various research findings to support their view that:
...intermediate labour market programs such as social
enterprises are an effective intervention that both builds the resilience of
young people and promotes their social inclusion, particularly their
participation in mainstream employment.[43]
3.45
Similar to Madcap’s ethos of employment and support for program participants,
Boystown’s social enterprises provide employment at the same time as they
provide wraparound support for young people.[44]
Argument for open employment
3.46
Other witnesses offered qualified support for social firms as ‘the
answer’, recognising them as playing a role but also potentially perpetuating a
stereotype that people with mental ill health need special treatment and cannot
undertake open employment.
3.47
Ms Laura Collister, General Manager, Rehabilitation Services, Mental
Illness Fellowship Victoria, acknowledged the confidence and opportunities that
people with a mental illness can gain from employment in social firms. She said
that Mental Illness Fellowship Victoria has its own social firm which it uses
to help particular individuals transition to open employment. However, her view
is that people with a mental illness should be working in the general community
to counter stigma and effect change on a larger scale:
I personally believe that the answer here is to find people
with mental illness employment in the open employment market – that is a
community responsibility, a community response. There is a danger with niche
solutions because programs can become isolated from the general community
rather than demonstrating that people with a mental illness are more like us
than not like us, that they are capable of working. If we want to address
stigma I think they should be working in the open community.
...open employment in the community is a large-scale
change...if you find the right job for the individual, you have got to go to
the community, where there are a million jobs, not a couple of social firms.[45]
3.48
Orygen Youth Health agreed:
While [social firms] do provide an employment option, they
are not part of the open labour market, which is where most experts agree the most
sustainable jobs exist.[46]
3.49
The Committee affirms the function of social firms in supporting people
with mental ill health, especially those who have been excluded from employment
and mainstream society for a number of years, helping them to build the skills
and confidence to go forward. The combination of employment and good support services
are mutually reinforcing.
3.50
Nonetheless, open employment should be the goal. This is something often
espoused by social firms themselves and not inconsistent when they function at
their most effective by providing employees with the social and work skills
required for transitioning to participation in the open employment market.
Recommendation 5 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth Government
examine ways to further support social enterprises that effectively
transition people with mental ill health into the open employment market. |
Wage subsidies as incentives
3.51
Wage subsidies are:
Payments made to eligible employers to help cover the costs
of paying wages in the first few months of employment for a person with
disability or a person experiencing other barriers to employment.
There are a number of wage subsidy programs which are
normally organised by Australian Government employment service
providers. [47]
3.52
The DEEWR website explains how the scheme works:
Disability Employment Services may negotiate to pay an
employer up to $1500 (excluding GST) as an incentive to employ a participant.
The employment must be for at least eight hours per week for
at least 13 weeks and have a reasonable expectation of continuing for more than
13 weeks (or six weeks in a seasonal industry).
The employment must be under open employment conditions. That
is, under a legal industrial agreement that complies with minimum standards
established under Commonwealth, state or territory law). It must also guarantee
the worker a weekly award-based wage, for example: no commission based or
subcontracting type positions.[48]
3.53
The Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Western Australia (CCI WA) suggested
that wage subsidies can play a role in encouraging employers to employ someone
with a disability, including people with a mental illness:
Wage subsidies provided to employers will help to encourage
recruitment and retention.
[small businesses] might be more likely to employ someone who
manifests those problems if they were able to access some sort of wage subsidy.[49]
3.54
The Top End Association for Mental Health commented that subsidies can
be a way to start a consumer’s journey towards mainstream employment.[50]
3.55
DEEWR said that wage subsidies are important and referred to them as
catalysts:
Often it is the first time someone has taken on somebody with
a disability. Somebody who has had a positive experience of taking on people
with disability will not need that additional assistance to convince them to
take on a second, third or fourth person with some form of disability.[51]
3.56
Mr Damon Munt, Operations Manager, Employment Services at Wesley Mission
agreed that wage subsidies can be a successful tool to move someone into employment.
Moreover, they can facilitate effective communication between the employer,
employment services provider and job seeker:
It is quite successful. We have very high conversion rates
when there is a wage subsidy attached to a placement. That wage subsidy is not
just about money; it increases the engagement with the employer, us and job
seeker. There is more of a partnership approach with that placement...[which
means] we are able to talk through some of those issues and talk through the
fact that the wage subsidy is offsetting some of the costs associated with the
down time or the person having to have a day off or whatever the case may be to
deal with that issue.[52]
3.57
The CCI WA cautioned that wage subsidies are not in and of themselves
‘the answer’:
It is one idea...It might alleviate some … concern. But I
think really the training and education is a much more important part of the
answer.[53]
3.58
Other witnesses drew attention to the possible pitfalls of relying on
wage subsidies. Miss Kerrie Banks, Service Manager, FSG Australia enVision Programs
indicated that they can be a short term solution and, if they do not lead somewhere,
potentially set the client back:
It generally only lasts around six months in our experience.
Some people have been successful but the majority frequently have not been so
successful in going beyond that period of time. The person not only has their
self-confidence built; their social network increases and financially they gain
– and they then find out that it is no longer an option for them ... It is
quite difficult for people to then regroup and go, “Is this about me, my
skills, my illness.”[54]
3.59
Mr Kevin Rogan, Chair of the Regional Skills Formation Network, and
consultant with the Regional Australians Apprenticeship Centre operating
through the Career Employment Group in Whyalla, indicated that employers may
not consider a $1,500 payment, paid only after a successful 13 week placement, is
worth their while, especially if they subsequently have a negative experience
with that person. [55]
Supported Wage System
3.60
DEEWR differentiated between wage subsidies and the Supported Wage
System (SWS):
The Supported Wage System is an industrial relations
instrument where you are working as opposed to a wage subsidy, which is
encouraging employers to take on somebody.[56]
3.61
The JobsAccess website outlines how the Supported Wage System works:
The Supported Wage System is a process that allows employers
to pay productivity based wages [following an approved assessors’ assessment
which is free to the employer] to people whose work productivity is
significantly reduced as a result of the effects of their disability. [57]
3.62
Ms Buffinton, Group Manager, Specialist Employment Services Group, DEEWR
clarified:
If somebody cannot work at the same level as a co-worker, we
can send in assessors to work out what is, if you like, the percentage of
productivity – it may be 70% of other workers.[58]
3.63
The DEEWR submission stated:
From 1 July 2012, a new Supported Wage System Employer
Payment will be available to employers not supported by an employment service
provider who employ people whose work productivity is reduced as a result of
their disability. The $2 000 incentive payment will be available to eligible
employers after they have employed a person under the Supported Wage System for
a minimum of 15 hours a week, for 26 weeks.[59]
3.64
Ms Melissa Williams, Manager of Gold Coast Employment Support Service pointed
to concerns she had regarding the Supported Wage System, namely that a client
with a mental illness has to be on the DSP in order to be eligible for it, at
the same time that, in her view, fewer people are being granted DSP:
...if somebody needs access to the Supported Wage System,
that is reliant on their eligibility for DSP. I want to know what is going to
happen to those people who may require that. Some people require it early in
returning to work and reach a point where they no longer require it. But they
are not going to be eligible for it, so what are we going to do with those
people? We have appealed and appealed for a young man for whom we have so much
evidence that he cannot work at industry standard. But he does not tick the
boxes for a DSP, so he cannot have supported wages, so he cannot work. I
believe we will see alot more of these across disabilities, including
psychiatric.[60]
3.65
Ms Buffinton, Group Manager, Specialist Disability Employment Services
Group, DEEWR acknowledged that the assessment for the Supported Wage System
‘does not work as well as it could’ for people with a mental illness,
especially with regards to accommodating the episodic nature of their
conditions. As such, it is under review:
As part of the last budget it was announced that we are going
to review the scheme, particularly for mental illness...The problem is, the
assessor goes in with somebody with mental illness who is going through quite a
positive period, and then they say this person does not need a supported wage.
But, of course, it is episodic. [61]
3.66
Ms Buffinton indicated that of the review results so far:
One thing that has come out is the need to cover absenteeism.
While they are there, while they are healthy, productivity is 100 per cent, but
then they get sick and it is not about reduction of productivity by 10 per
cent; they do not turn up to work at all for a while. Is there a possibility
for the supported wage scheme to cover the wages for those discrete periods of
time – to cover getting people in to cover those sorts of situations?[62]
3.67
DEEWR advised of a delay with the review.[63]
3.68
The Supported Wage System is an important tool for removing barriers to
employment for some people with a mental illness, and encouraging benefit
recipients to work. The Committee supports improving its effectiveness in order
to be sufficiently flexible to accommodate the episodic nature of some mental
illnesses. And also, potentially assisting those with a mental illness not
eligible for the DSP.
Recommendation 6 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth Government
ensure that the Supported Wage System is sufficiently flexible to accommodate
employees with a mental illness by taking into account the episodic and
fluctuating nature of their condition. |
Enhancing communication and links between supply and demand
3.69
The Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ACCI) and CCI WA provided
examples of material that they have disseminated to their members about
employing people with mental ill health. This includes information on managing
employees with a mental illness, citing details of the Australian Human Rights
Commission Guide for Workers with a Mental Illness: A Practical Guide for
Managers, and the ACCI’s plan for the employment of people with a disability,
including a mental illness.[64]
3.70
Increasing engagement of the disability sector with employer
associations to get key messages out to employers was one of the main points
made in a 2008 ACCI submission to the discussion paper into the national mental
health and disability employment strategy.[65]
3.71
ACCI restated its belief in greater engagement between the disability
sector and employer associations because of the latter’s capacity for outreach
and leadership. Such engagement should:
Encourage the disability sector to talk less to themselves
and engage more with employer bodies and their members. Open up communication
and take advantage of the association networks. Communicating with employers is
a challenge, even for associations – information comes at them from all
directions, particularly in small business, and it is hard to make an impact.
That is why their trusted channels of information have more success.[66]
For example, a very good disability provider could be very
effective in developing networks within their local area but it is how you look
at it from the top end as well: how you provide the leadership and mechanisms
by which you can create the context for the conversation.[67]
3.72
ACCI’s 2008 submission recommended that the Government consider an employer
engagement project for people with disabilities that has medium to long term
goals. ACCI reiterated its continued support for this approach but would now:
Broaden it to being a diversity and participation approach
with sufficient resources to drive networking/workshop activities for DES/Job
Services Providers to better work with employer groups and employers. The
project could also interrogate the information that hopefully can be more
clearly provided on where people are employed and where the opportunities for
further employment can be identified.[68]
3.73
ACCI indicated that a tangible benefit to more open communication
between the supply and demand side might be the ability to: ’target approaches
to sectors and even jobs that are most suitable.’[69]
3.74
Ms Jennifer Lambert, Director of Employment, Education and Training at
the ACCI cited an example. She said one of ACCI’s leading hospitality
organisations could potentially create opportunities for people with a
disability, including a mental health disability, yet that is not something on
the radar with the human resources managers. According to Ms Lambert, this is a
missed opportunity.[70]
3.75
Ms Lambert went on to say that missed opportunities arise because
employing people with a mental illness is not considered a mainstream issue,
and yet that’s exactly what it is:
We are talking about a big issue; we are talking about large
numbers of people with mental health issues [on benefits]...so it is mainstream
in its size and dimensions but not mainstream [yet] in its employer outcomes. [71]
Creating networking opportunities as part of a broader participation
approach
3.76
ACCI indicated that it is already represented on a range of different reference
and advisory groups, including Job Services, DES, Indigenous, Mature Age and
others.[72] However, the fragmented
character of the service delivery sector inhibited engagement:
So many of the issues and desired outcomes for communication
and engagement are the same, yet each part of Government generally works
separately on these agendas.[73]
3.77
The ACCI believes that building networks between the supply and demand
sides needs to occur at both the strategic and operational levels.[74]
3.78
On the strategic level, Ms Lambert said she was pleased that ACCI had
recently received funding for one year, for a dedicated person to encourage
greater workforce participation for mature age workers. She intimated that
establishing a dedicated position to encourage greater workforce participation
of those with a mental illness would be similarly useful.[75]
She observed that, in both cases, a three to four year minimum commitment would
be required in order to effect:
Major cultural change and a major build up of opportunities
of better connecting the supply to the demand side.[76]
‘Business champions’ sharing success stories and making the business case
for greater inclusivity
3.79
Mental Illness Fellowship Victoria outlined one way that it had successfully
brought the supply and demand sides together. The Fellowship organised an employment
luncheon for about 100 employers, in order for them get to know the
organisation and learn what it is they do. At the luncheon, employers shared their
positive experiences in employing people with a mental health condition:
One of the best marketing strategies was when an employer got
up and talked about the success they were experiencing and what good employees
we had put them with were. That was Delaware North and they were fantastic.[77]
3.80
DEEWR endorsed doing something similar:
Putting case studies out into national business conferences
of employers engaging with people with mental illness is incredibly powerful.[78]
3.81
Major employers were supportive. The Chief Executive Officer of Dampier
Salt Limited suggested:
sponsorship of conferences or workshops where specialists can
talk to employers as well as where employers can share best practice.[79]
3.82
The Department of Defence mentioned how it had successfully shared experiences
of employing people with a mental illness with other APS agencies, at a Comcare[80]
conference.[81]
3.83
DEEWR referred to working with companies to facilitate these types of
forums, ‘There are those that are open to the idea and that is the area that we
are working on.’[82]
3.84
Ms Sally Sinclair, CEO of the National Employment Services Association
(NESA) mentioned the national awards for excellence it issues to employers who
look after the mental health and wellbeing of their employees. The awards
highlight the important leadership role that employers play in the broader
community, and demonstrate that employers wish to be seen to be proactive in
this space:
Last year we gave a special award to Abigroup, who provide
outstanding leadership in this area, and this year we had two large employers,
Brookfield Multiplex and Stockland, who sponsored the awards. They are also
doing fantastic work. They cannot understand why employers are not more on the
page so they saw that as a way to have direct involvement.[83]
3.85
The Committee is of the view that as important as it is for
organisations like NESA, to identify and validate those employers who are
proactive in looking after the mental health and wellbeing of their workforce, ‘business
champions’ need to also self-identify and actively make the business case to
others in their industry as well as the broader business community, for hiring
people with a mental illness, retaining valued employees with a mental illness
and fostering the mental health and well-being of all employees in a workplace.
Business champions can show how workforce shortages in their industry might be
filled or stopped by adopting a more inclusive approach.
3.86
There is strong evidence supporting the advantages of direct contact
between stakeholders through workshops or other types of forums such as
conferences.
3.87
To this end the Commonwealth Government should work with program
providers and employers to disseminate information on various programs and
their outcomes in workplaces.
3.88
Discussion forums for sharing ‘good stories’ and best practice might
include the main service providers (Beyond Blue, Sane Australia etc),
organisations already quite far down the path of providing integrated and
tailored solutions (such as Defence, Abigroup and Rio Tinto – see later in this
chapter for details) and other organisations that are interested in following
suit and pursuing similar paths but specific to their own organisational needs
and culture.
3.89
The Committee recommends that discussions amongst stakeholders include
the development of national standards for best employer awards for recruiting
and retaining employees with a mental illness, and promoting the mental health
and wellbeing of all employees.
Recommendation 7 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth Government
work with employer associations and employers to promote the business case
for employing people with a mental illness. This should include:
- showcasing
employers’ broader workplace strategies for employing and retaining employees
with a mental health condition and proactively promoting the mental health and
well-being of all their employees as good human resource practice;
- discussion
of the range of Commonwealth Government assistance available to employers;
- having
employers share stories of successful placements of employees with mental ill
health in their workplaces with others in their industry and the broader
business community, including having ‘business champions’ speak about the
business case for greater inclusivity; and
- jointly
developing national standards for best employer awards that endorse recruiting
and retaining employees with a mental illness, and promoting the mental
health and wellbeing of all employees.
|
Small and medium sized businesses sometimes better
3.90
NESA suggested that small and medium sized businesses were, perhaps
surprisingly, typically better than the larger companies in their dealings with
employees with a mental health condition:
You would think that [small medium sized employers] would
have all the attendant challenges, but they are the group that will give people
a go and are very integrated in their local community.
Our finalists this year [for the good employer awards], for
example, were all small to medium sized employers. The employer that won was a
local aged-care organisation of 50 staff. Historically, large companies are not
in the mix when it comes to this area or more broadly employing people with
disadvantage.[84]
3.91
Orygen Youth Health concurred that this was their experience:
Many times what we have found is that employers are a bit
more sympathetic to mental illness than people might imagine. A lot of the
people we get are employed, like most people, in small to medium sized
businesses. It is not huge corporations that are employing people. So people
quite often have their own personal experiences with someone whom they know. They
go, ‘Oh, my cousin’; it is very common, so they are willing to take a bit of
latitude.[85]
3.92
ACCI advised that the majority of the its 350,000 members were small to
medium sized businesses and whilst it might be structurally easier for larger
companies to have a dedicated diversity manager to cope with the issues and
have a positive agenda, the opportunities for disability employment service
providers to link up with small to medium sized businesses presented because:
a small to medium sized business will be looking at their
local community and saying what will be the benefit of employment engagement in
their local community ... The potential [opportunity for employment] is there
because of the nature of the personal relationship that small business will have
with its local community.[86]
3.93
However, ACCI cautioned that some small businesses might have more concerns
about the risk of hiring someone with a mental illness:
It is easier for Woolworths or that size of business to put
on a number within its multiple tens of thousands of workforce as opposed to a
small business of 10 people. If [small businesses] take a risk with one, that
is a bigger risk for them.[87]
Assistance for the employer
JobAccess
3.94
The Committee heard that small businesses were willing to take on people
with mental ill health but wanted to know that there was assistance available
if they needed it.
3.95
For instance, Mr Kevin Rogan of the Regional Skills Formation Network in
Whyalla referred to employers’ concerns about not having the necessary resources
required for the ongoing support and supervision of a worker with a mental
illness.[88]
3.96
Ms Marcia Kuhne, Manager of Industrial Relations Policy of the CCI WA, made
the key point that employers usually only seek assistance if they encounter a
problem:
employers tend to look for a service when they need it. That
is one of the biggest issues. If there were solutions that were available and
readily understood that would be part of making it mainstream, and employers
would know who to go to.[89]
3.97
DEEWR referred to a free information and advice service, funded by the
Commonwealth Government, to assist employees and employers.[90]
JobAccess offers advice on:
n how to create a
supportive and healthy work environment;
n how to search for a
job and keep that job
n step-by-step guides
on recruitment, adjusting a workplace and understanding rights and
responsibilities at work;
n work related
modifications and services for people with disability; and
n disability Employment
Services and Programs.[91]
3.98
DEEWR told the Committee that JobAccess’s ‘main focus is employers.’[92]
The JobAccess website features some case studies and success stories about the
benefits to business of employing people with mental ill health.[93]
Although, these case studies are interspersed with the case studies about
people with a physical or intellectual disability so they are not always easy
to find.
3.99
JobAccess is a free service for all Australians. The website indicates
that people can access the service by contacting a JobAccess advisor on 1800
464 800.[94] The service is ongoing,
provides information on services that may be available and works as a referral
service as well.[95]
3.100
It is not insignificant that the Committee did not discover this number
until some way through the inquiry and there was little evidence or knowledge
of it among employers.[96]
3.101
Even experts were unaware of such support on offer. Dr Geoffrey Waghorn
of Queensland Centre for Mental Health Research observed:
[DEEWR} are not providing any structured form of post-employment
support that I am aware of.[97]
3.102
Ms Nicole Tuckwell, Divisional Manager, Workfocus Group, an employment
service provider said that:
There is limited awareness of the free advice and services
provided by JobAcess; therefore, services available to assist those with mental
illness in the workplace are under-utilised.[98]
3.103
Ms Kuhne indicated that the CCI WA had recently become aware of
JobAccess and would be looking to incorporate it into its training programs.[99]
3.104
DEEWR later noted that the JobAccess service has been expanded in the
current Budget:
To include professionals in the mental health area who will
provide information and support relating to the employment of people with a
mental illness. This measure, which is part of the 2011-2012 Budget, also
includes funding to encourage employment service providers to access the
expertise of the JobAccess staff.[100]
3.105
The Committee is of the firm view that information about this service
and its potential benefits for employees, employers and employment services must
be more widely disseminated through appropriate channels (see Recommendation 9
further on).
Workplace modifications and adjustments
3.106
The JobsAccess website contains information on the forms of assistance
available to employers, employees with a mental health condition and employment
service providers to help them accommodate a worker with disability in a job:
Assistance is available for a broad range of
modifications including, but not limited to, physical and environmental
workplace adjustments, computer software upgrades, vehicle modifications,
communication technology devices and specific items of equipment an employee
may require to do their job.[101]
Employment Assistance Fund
3.107
The Employment Assistance Fund service, accessed through a JobsAccess
advisor, replaces its predecessor known as the Workplace Modifications Scheme.
In respect of people with a mental illness, the Fund:
provides assistance to employers of people with disability
and mental health condition by providing financial assistance to purchase a
range of work related modifications and services. Assistance is available for
people who are about to start a job or who are currently working, as well as
those who require assistance to find and prepare for work.[102]
3.108
The Fund may reimburse the cost of work-related modifications and
services, including:
n Specialists services
for employees with mental health conditions; and
n Mental health
first-aid training.[103]
3.109
The Employment Assistance Fund also provides a free workplace assessment
to help identify the required modifications.
3.110
Like the JobAccess service itself, the Committee heard few details of
the Fund and how it operates exactly.
3.111
The joint department submission supplied the following information about
the service:
Employment service providers may also access specialist
mental health counselling and stress and behaviour management services from the
Employment Assistance Fund to assist people experiencing problems as a result
of their condition.[104]
3.112
There appears limited knowledge of this service too though. WorkFocus
said of it:
The Employment Assistance Fund could include more support for
mental health issues in the workplace. For some job seekers with mental ill
health, the current levels leave service gaps and are not significant enough to
provide full support. Additionally, in line with the preceding point [about the
limited awareness of free advice and services provided by JobAccess], a lack of
awareness means that the support offered by the Fund is underutilised at
present.[105]
Jobs in Jeopardy (JiJ)
3.113
Jobs in Jeopardy is an intervention provided by disability employment
services (DES) providers to assist employments at risk of losing their
employment as a result of their disability or health condition, including
mental illness:
The employee can present to any DES provider of their choice,
in their area, and the DES provider can commence helping them immediately. The
DES provider works flexibly with the participant, and if required, their
employer, delivering an individual program of assistance that helps the
participant retain their employment.[106]
3.114
There was scant mention (a one sentence description) of the program in
the Government’s joint submission.[107]The Department of Human
Services website has limited information about the program on it. There does
not appear to be a phone number specifically for Jobs in Jeopardy, but rather a
directive to your nearest DHS Service Centre.[108]
3.115
Mr Damon Munt, Operations Manager, Employment Services, Wesley Mission
and Mr Andrew Mitchell, Director of Mental Health, Employment and Counselling,
alluded to a lack of awareness surrounding the Jobs in Jeopardy program.[109]
3.116
Wesley Mission suggested that there needs to be an awareness campaign,
through employer industry groups, about the benefits of the program, because ‘it
is virtually unknown in the general community.’[110]
3.117
DEEWR acknowledged that not all employers are aware of the existence of a
program like Jobs in Jeopardy.[111]
3.118
Beyond limited knowledge of the program, take-up of support offered by Jobs
in Jeopardy was obstructed by reluctance on the parts of employers and
employees to acknowledge a need for it. Mr Munt explained:
When we have promoted [the program] locally to employers one
of the first responses we get is, ‘We do not have anyone with disabilities who
works here’. They are not interested because they claim to not have anyone
with a disability or mental illness.
We try to explore that further by asking how many employees
they have. If they say they have 50 we tell them they may not be aware of
that. You may have absenteeism or people who are not functioning in the
job...It may just be job dissatisfaction and the like, but there may be
underlying issues that they are not aware of. But if they then go and talk to
the employees, the employees do not want to turn around and say, ‘By the way, I
am struggling in the job because I have a mental health issue.[112]
3.119
DEEWR referred to a 2008 review of JiJ that found failings:
Although the program is flexible in meeting the needs of
people with disability who require support in the workplace in order to
maintain their employment, awareness and understanding of the JiJ program is
low amongst people with disability and their employers. [113]
Earlier access
3.120
Ms Janet Bromley, Manager, Services, Lantern, explained that there is a
qualifying period before a program like Jobs in Jeopardy can be accessed. She
postulated that this might be a period of 12 months. She stressed that does not
help people in a job who experience difficulties earlier than the prescribed
qualifying period.[114] According to Lantern:
The first weeks of any new job are often when there is the
greatest risk of losing the job due to increased levels of anxiety and stress
associated with a new role.[115]
3.121
The Department of Human Services (DHS) referred to the Jobs in Jeopardy
program as a ‘safety net option’ and mentioned other interventions that might
occur earlier, including approaching CRS Australia (formerly known as the
Commonwealth Rehabilitation Service) or DES providers for assistance.[116]
3.122
The Jobs In Jeopardy website states that to be eligible for assistance:
You must have been employed for at least 8 hours a week on
average over the last 13 weeks, and not be receiving assistance from another
employment services provider. Customers who meet this requirement can approach
a DES directly for assistance or Centrelink for information on links to local
providers.[117]
3.123
DEEWR clarified that the Jobs in Jeopardy program is actually accessible
to people before 13 weeks ‘if there is an expectation that the employment will
last 13 weeks’.[118]
3.124
Ms Denise Fredericks, Divisional Manager, Victoria/Tasmania, CRS
Australia told the Committee that, from her perspective, it was a satisfying
program to be involved in:
The Jobs in Jeopardy program is a program that we love to
engage in...There are some eligibility criteria, but it gives us the
opportunity to go into that workplace and work with both the employer and
employee to sustain that employment. There may be things like education and
training within the workplace that might help other employees understand the
situation. We might look at job redesign...and whether some simple changes
could be made that could accommodate that. Some of the things we might do there
would be to look at: is it the shifts that that particular job seeker is
working that are impacting on their mental health problems? We would then
liaise with the employer to keep the employee working but have the job arranged
slightly differently for that person.[119]
3.125
Mrs Donna Faulkner, Chairperson of Board of Directors, Disability
Employment Australia and Executive Director of Work Solutions, Gippsland also
praised the program and its potential:
I wanted to compliment DEEWR on the great Jobs in Jeopardy
initiative...I have had the opportunity to work with some rather large
employers...it gives us an opportunity to minimise the stigma attached to
workers and to assist them to rescue their job, rescue their opportunities –
rescue their life, really.[120]
3.126
It strikes the Committee that there is a limited knowledge about the
JobAccess, Employment Assistance Fund and Jobs in Jeopardy Program alike.
3.127
If there is to be a greater uptake of all these initiatives, there needs
to be a clearer and more actively promoted communication strategy about what services
are on offer, how they can assist employees and employers alike, and the
process to follow for accessing the available support services.
3.128
Specifically in relation to Jobs in Jeopardy, the website also needs to
make it quite clear that there is, in fact, a minimal qualifying period. Having
‘an expectation that employment will last 13 weeks’ appears an arbitrary
qualification and difficult to prove. The whole process needs to be made more
transparent and be available early on in the piece. The criteria for access
should certainly be relaxed when necessary, particularly given the under
utilisation of the program. It may be immaterial that someone is receiving
assistance from an employment service provider, if this just means that ‘they
are on the books’ and not otherwise receiving active support to maintain their
employment.
3.129
The Committee notes that the JobAccess website contains some case-studies
and success stories of people with mental illnesses helped through JobsAccess.[121]
3.130
The Employment Assistance Fund and Jobs in Jeopardy websites need to
make it clearer how employers can use them to help people with a mental illness
in their workplaces.
Recommendation 8 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth Government support
and, where necessary, amend the JobAccess, Employment Assistance Fund and
Jobs in Jeopardy initiatives to ensure that:
- the
scope of eligibility requirements does not prohibit employees and employers
who require support; and
- ways
of accessing and information about the JobAccess, Employment Assistance Fund and
Jobs in Jeopardy programs and their benefits, including for employment of
people with a mental illness, be clarified and readily available to employees
and employers.
All these programs need to be promoted more widely and their
websites kept updated. |
Written resources for employers
3.131
In response to an assertion by Safe Work Australia that there was an absence
of guidance material for employers in relation to supporting workers with
mental ill health, [122] the Australian Human
Rights Commission produced a document titled 2010 Workers with mental
illness: a practical guide for managers.[123] That guide is supported
by Safe Work Australia and endorsed by the Fair Work Ombudsman, Beyondblue, the
Mental Health Council of Australia and Sane Australia.[124]
3.132
The AHRC guide offers comprehensive advice to managers and employers
about how to meet their obligations towards all workers in their business,
including workers with mental illness.
3.133
The AHRC Guide states that beyond meeting legal obligations, other
reasons for developing mental health strategies in the workforce include:
n Because a safe and
health workplace is good for business
Þ Reducing
costs associated with worker absence from work and high worker turnover;
Þ Achieving
greater staff loyalty and a higher return on training investment;
Þ Minimising
stress levels and improving morale;
Þ Avoiding
litigation and fines for breaches of health and safety laws; and
Þ Avoiding
industrial disputes.
n Because it improves
productivity
n Because society and
workplaces are diverse
n Because mental
illness can affect anyone.[125]
3.134
The Guide provides advice on how to create a safe and healthy workforce
through identifying possible workplace practices, actions or incidents which
may cause, or contribute to, the mental illness of workers and taking actions
to eliminate or minimise those risks.[126] Such measures include:
n having effective policies
and procedures;
n offering flexible
working arrangements; developing mentoring and peer support systems;
n providing access to
counselling services and/or specialist support groups;
n developing a greater
understanding through education and training; [and]
n ensuring safe and
healthy work conditions.[127]
3.135
The AHRC guide contains contact details for National Mental Health
Services such as beyond blue, headspace, SANE Australia and the Australian
Psychological Society.[128]
3.136
ACCI endorsed the usefulness of the AHRC Guide and similar resources for
employers. [129]
To this end, the Guide was promoted in one of its Business Bytes circulars:
There is a real business case for managing employees who
suffer from mental illness. The AHRC report estimated that stress related
workers compensation claims cost in excess of $10 million per year. In
addition to this cost, businesses lose billions of dollars each year by not
implementing early intervention strategies.
The guide suggests a number of practical strategies for
employers managing employees with a mental illness or suspected mental illness.
The strategies are based on the principles of effective and open communication,
making reasonable adjustments and focusing on pragmatic solutions. [130]
3.137
Disseminating information about written resources – together with
information about programs like JobAccess and Jobs In Jeopardy – through
employer associations can may play a part in a more effective communication
strategy.
3.138
Nonetheless, these important messages do not always reach their intended
audience. ACCI expressed concern that:
really [the guide and similar resources] would not hit the mainstream
employer distribution...even if they came into the inbox of the average
employer, it does not engage because it is a crossover between a research and
selling document about the importance of the issue and the practical things, so
it tried to be many things to many people.[131]
3.139
NSW Consumers Advisory Group noted a similar issue with guides that they
have produced saying that the guides appear not to have been distributed widely
or been well understood by employers.[132]
3.140
Ms Nicole Tuckwell, Divisional Manager, WorkFocus Group agreed, saying
that, perhaps in a crowded space, the messages just do not resonate:
We find we are getting the messages out to employers via
their peak industries, through the likes of the ACCI and Australian Human
Resources Institute, and yet is just not being heard.[133]
Importance of early intervention and prevention
3.141
The importance of early intervention and prevention in education and employment
is an underlying and recurrent theme in this report.
3.142
In relation to productivity of employees with a mental health condition,
Mr Bolton, Senior Advisor, Employment, Education and Training, ACCI said:
One of the greatest issues I feel needs to be addressed is
the actual breaking of the cycle of mental health issues that prevent
engagement with the workforce [and that, in turn, may contribute to a
deterioration of mental health]...Having early interventions to break that
cycle, preferably while people are in the workforce or in education and
training moving towards employment, would be an ideal scenario.[134]
Legislation
3.143
A legislative framework is an important starting point or foundation
underpinning the employer’s responsibilities and the employee’s rights.
However, it is largely a reactive instrument that is invoked after
discrimination is experienced by an employee.
3.144
The CCI WA referred to the plethora of legislative instruments that
already exist, as part of general human resources management, to protect
employees with mental ill health from suffering discrimination or adverse
action in the workplace. These include the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth); the
Disability Discrimination Act 1992 (Cth) and relevant state occupational
health and safety legislation.[135]
3.145
AHRC further noted that for people with mental ill health living in
Australia, the right to work is recognised in the Convention on the Rights of Persons
with Disabilities, ratified by Australia on 17 July 2008.[136]
3.146
CCI WA set out in detail some of the current provisions that employers
are bound by under the Fair Work Act and affirmed that:
The current employment law framework provides adequate
support and protection for employees suffering from mental illness.[137]
3.147
The ARHC recommended that the National Employment Standards set out at Part
2-2 of the Fair Work Act be amended to so that the right to request flexible
working arrangements include people with disability. Currently, the right to
flexible working arrangements is restricted to parents and people with caring
responsibilities. The ARHC stated:
Expanding this right to people with disability will enable
people with disability to have the same right to request flexible working
arrangements. This has been the law in the UK now for several years.[138]
3.148
The CCI WA opposed the AHRC’s suggestion, stating that employees
suffering from mental illness already have the ability to request flexible
working arrangements:
Notwithstanding the ability to make an individual flexibility
arrangement (IFA) with the employer, employees suffering from mental ill health
can enter into other flexibility arrangements such as working from home,
reduced working hours or removing/substituting particularly stressful aspects
of a job. Flexibility arrangements can also be utilised to allow employees
suffering from mental illness to attend appointments, counselling and make any
necessary arrangements.[139]
3.149
The right to request flexible work arrangements has been and is the
subject of numerous recent and on-going reviews and the subject of a private
members bill, the Fair Work Amendment Bill (Better Work/Life Balance), which
has been reviewed by this Committee. Any amendment to the Fair Work Act along
the lines proposed by AHRC should be considered in light of these other
comprehensive reviews.[140]
Employee Assistance Programs (EAPs)
3.150
The Employee Assistance Professional Association of Australasia Inc. website
defines an EAP as:
A work-based intervention program designed to enhance the
emotional, mental and general psychological wellbeing of all employees and
includes services for immediate family members.[141]
3.151
EAPs are touted as preventative and proactive:
The aim is to provide preventative and proactive
interventions for the early detection, identification and/or resolution of both
work and personal problems that may include, but are not limited to
...depression, anxiety disorders [and] psychiatric disorders.[142]
3.152
However, the usefulness of EAPs appears a mixed picture. Dr Bowers, CEO
of the Australasian Centre for Remote and Rural Mental Health, described EAPs
as a reactive strategy. [143] Like legislative
instruments they are often utilised after the event.
3.153
Mr Neville Tomkins, First Assistant Secretary, Defence People Solutions,
Department of Defence spoke highly of the EAP provisions at Defence as one of
the tools utilised for keeping their employees mentally fit ‘the EAP service is
something that is vital to the health of our own staff.’[144]
3.154
However, he also acknowledged that the participation rate is low –
something he says that is no different to any other organisation. Nonetheless
it is a service available to all staff, and their families, to discuss work and
non-work related issues.[145]
3.155
Ms Sarah Marshall, National Environmental and Sustainability Manager,
Abigroup Ltd suggested that EAPs are not suited to all industries. For example,
in the construction industry:
...EAP will not work. Some of the guys on site are not going
to call a phone number to a stranger whose face they have never seen. EAP is
one tool that you can use that may work for some of the office workers.[146]
3.156
SANE Australia agreed:
While they can be really effective up to a point, they are certainly
not the answer for everybody.
Many workplaces have employment assistance programs and they
often will feel that they do not need to do much else. [147]
3.157
Mr Bo Li, Senior Policy Advisor, Professional Practice, Australian
Psychological Society, also cautioned against interpeting EAPs as the whole
answer:
I think it is unfortunate that employers see EAP as a way of
outsourcing their responsibilities...and not have the adequate mental health
literacy to understand that it does not require specialist mental health
intervention to maintain somebody’s psychologically healthy profile.[148]
3.158
Dr Caryl Barnes, Consultant Psychiatrist, Black Dog Institute concurred:
The problem is if people think they have fixed it by sending
the employee to 10 sessions of EAP and they do not have to handle it anymore,
and say ‘You should be fixed now’...that can be unhelpful.[149]
3.159
Dr Rebecca Matthews, Manager, Practice Standards and Resources, Australian
Psychological Society said:
there is no connection back to the employer. It is sort of
that stigma story again. I think really what the ideal would be is that there
is some sort of contracting arrangement with the individual that certain things
get fed back to the employer, which will then improve their situation within
the workplace and also offer them support .... that is not always what
employees want. So, it is tricky.[150]
3.160
Dr Barnes acknowledged that EAP services have a role to play, but indicated
that beyond sending somebody out to an EAP, managers may need additional
support in the workplace.[151]
3.161
Mr Michael Sluis, Community Programs Manager, Black Dog Institute,
observed that the culture of the workplace is perhaps more important than
whether an EAP is in place, or a particular training session takes place:
As you look around an organisation, are there posters on the
wall that demonstrate the values espoused in those sessions? What are people
around the water cooler saying about employees who have perhaps experienced a
mental illness at work and how were they treated? So there is a level of very
subtle cultural and behavioural things that employees are keenly aware of.[152]
3.162
Ms Jacqui Wallace, Strategic Programs Manager, Black Dog Institute
highlighted how key the relationship between the employee and their direct
manager is developed:
There needs to be boundaries and expectations on both sides,
but it is important to ensure that communication is comfortable and open and
that the manager is well skilled to be able to deal with that.[153]
3.163
Beyondblue supported this view:
research suggests that the support of the manager or
supervisor is the most strongly associated factor in successful job retention
for people who experience mental illness.[154]
3.164
Professor Vijaya Manicavasagar, Director of Psychological Services at
Black Dog Institute spoke of the need to remove fear in workplaces about
employing people with a mental health condition and the importance of education
programs that talk about treatment options and how these conditions are practicably
managed.[155]
3.165
Mr Nicholas Arvanitis, Program Manager, Employment and Workforce, Beyond
Blue, noted that EAPs are a less common feature of the small to medium business
sector because of their cost, ‘Small and medium businesses do not have the
resources to provide an EAP’.[156]
Education and training in the workplace
3.166
Dr Barnes, also from Black Dog Institute, echoed colleague Professor
Manicavasagar’s remarks and said that consideration of employees with a mental
health condition should be no different to accommodating those with a physical
ailment:
In the physical disability range we talk about reasonable
adjustments for someone to get back into work. I think we really need to get
the adjustments that we need for mental health considered at the same pitch.[157]
3.167
There are various ways to foster a workplace culture in which employees,
managers and employers are as comfortable discussing ways to manage a mental
health condition as a physical one in the workplace.
3.168
Witnesses referred to a range of strategies, from educational workshops
and e-learning programs to more integrated workplace programs that seek to
comprehensively counter stigma, encourage inclusivity and promote mental
resilience.
Mental health awareness training to increase mental health literacy
3.169
Beyondblue indicated how critical mental health awareness training is in
workplaces across Australia:
Job strain has shown to … be linked to people experiencing
depression. Seventeen percent of depression is actually attributable to
pressures within the workplace. We need to … look at what is happening within
the workplaces across Australia so that people understand the policies and
practices that they can put into place to minimise the impact of work on their
employees.[158]
3.170
Black Dog Institute added that:
That type of [work] stress is more likely to exacerbate other
types of mental illness, such as bipolar or psychotic illness.[159]
3.171
Beyondblue and Black Dog Institute identified mental health awareness
training as key to breaking down barriers. [160] Recent research by
Beyondblue and Beaton Research and Consulting indicates that:
People who had … undertaken mental health awareness training
had lower levels of stigma and a greater ability to … understand what to do.[161]
3.172
Professor Helen Christensen, President, International Society for
Research on Internet Interventions, said the aim of such training is to
increase people’s mental health literacy:
Teaching people what the disorders are, what the risk factors
are and trying to tackle the stigma associated with coming out and talking
about them or reacting in a normal way to somebody who has a problem.[162]
Mental health first aid
3.173
Programs for mental health literacy include the Mental Health First Aid
(MHFA) program developed by Professor Tony Jorm and Ms Betty Kitchener OAM of
the University of Melbourne. MHFA is:
The help provided to a person developing a mental health
problem or in a mental health crisis, until appropriate professional treatment
is received or until the crisis resolves.[163]
3.174
MHFA runs education courses for employees to learn how to apply mental
health first aid to their co-workers. Taught by MHFA instructors who qualify to
teach following a five day training course, it increases knowledge, reduces
stigma and increases supportive actions for people working in human services,
including police officers, prison officers, high school teachers, TAFE and
university lecturers, social and welfare workers, Aboriginal health workers,
occupational therapists, lawyers and anyone in a team leader or management
role. The program has won awards and been rolled out in 15 other countries.[164]
3.175
MHFA offers a range of courses. The Standard Course teaches adults how
to provide initial support to adults who are developing a mental illness or
experiencing a mental health crisis. Participants learn the signs and symptoms
of a range of mental health problems, where and how to get help and what sort
of help is the most effective.[165]
3.176
A number of witnesses endorsed this type of course. Mr Jim Buultjens,
CEO, Fairhaven Service emphasised:
there needs to be more training and awareness of mental
health issues. We recommend that there be more funded places in mental health
first aid and other courses relevant to mental ill health.[166]
Beyond Blue’s National Workplace Program
3.177
The Beyondblue mission is to increase the capacity of the broader
Australian community to understand mental illness, specifically to prevent
depression and respond effectively.[167] It also aims to provide
a national focus and galvanise community leadership on the topic.
3.178
The Beyondblue National Workplace Program (NWP) is an awareness raising,
early intervention and prevention program specifically for workplace settings
which aims to increase the knowledge and skills of staff and managers to
address mental health issues in the workplace. [168]
3.179
Over 40 Beyondblue accredited facilitators,
who are located in every state and territory capital city, and in a range of regional
and rural centres, deliver the NWP. The facilitators have a tertiary
qualification in mental health and at least two years clinical experience
treating adults for depression, anxiety and related substance use plus
experience in adult education. The program works closely with the Beyondblue
Employment and Workforce Program which focuses on research, policy and best
practice.[169]
3.180
Beyondblue, includes among the program’s successes:
n presented to over 400
organisations and 40,000 participants in Australia.
n independently
evaluated in Australia with proven outcomes for organisations and employees . It has been
shown consistently to significantly:
Þ increase
awareness
Þ decrease
stigma
Þ improve
attitudes
Þ increase
confidence to assist someone to seek help.
n piloted successfully
in the UK through the Sainsbury Centre of Mental Health after a global search
for an early intervention program for
workplaces. The program is now licensed in the UK under Impact on Depression. As part of this process
it was independently evaluated by the University of Nottingham in the UK.
n awarded the
Australian Institute of Training and Development “Excellence in a Learning Resource”
in 2008.
n adapted for specific targeted
workplace audiences including Victoria Police, Legal, Accountants,
Rural and Professional Sports. [170]
3.181
Key clients include ANZ Bank, Australian Federal Police, Australian
Football League, Minter Ellison, Optus, Victorian TAFE Association and
VicRoads.[171]
3.182
The Beyondblue National Workplace Program has been in operation since
2004, and continues to evolve:
When it started there was a key focus on people actually not
knowing what depression and anxiety were. What we have found over the last
couple of years is that people are asking ‘What do we do?’ We understand what
it is, but what can we actually do about it. It has been fantastic to actually
watch as the different industries start to talk to us ...It started with a lot
of government organisations and then moved to business professional services.
We are also now working with a lot of mining, construction and transport type
industries.[172]
3.183
Beyond Blue drew attention to the need to tailor messages to different
industries:
I think it is really important that you have someone who
understands that industry talking to them... at the same time the key messages
are the same and you think about how you present those in a different way. If
you are going to speak to a construction group, go into their crib hut ... do
not bring them into an office in the city. Also thinking about the different
pressures in different jobs; so you compare the legal profession to someone who
is working outdoors or in construction, and you would be talking about quite
different things.[173]
3.184
The Beyondblue website provides further information on the industry-specific
programs that they offer.[174]
Black Dog Institute
3.185
Established in 2002, the Black Dog Institute is a not-for-profit,
educational, research, clinical and community-oriented facility offering
specialist expertise in depression and bipolar disorder. Attached to the
Prince of Wales Hospital, it is affiliated with the University of New South
Wales[175]
3.186
Black Dog has been running its workplace training programs since 2010.
Like Beyondblue, Blackdog works with a range of larger organisations, including
Qantas, NSW Police and the Commonwealth Bank.[176]
Industry specific programs include specialised programs for the legal
profession, protective services and sporting bodies.[177]
3.187
Black Dog runs its Workplace Mental Health and Wellbeing Programs, based
on the findings of over 20 years of research. Drawing on current evidence-based
research the program aims to:
Develop healthy, happy workplace environments by increasing
awareness to mood disorders, building skills in resilience, stress management
and developing skills in managing individuals with mood disorders.[178]
3.188
The Workplace Mental Health and Wellbeing Program pitches courses to all
staff, as well as conducting others specific to managers, team leaders and HR
managers, and CEOs, directors and senior executives.[179]
3.189
Black Dog employs psychologists and general practitioners to run its programs.
The organisational also calls upon a range of volunteers and ambassadors who
play a contributory role in ‘breaking down barriers and destigmatising.’[180]
3.190
Black Dog Institute expressed a concern that it is only the larger
businesses and organisations that can afford to purchase their programs. They
would like to see incentives to encourage more equitable access by
organisations with fewer resources:
Sadly, we have been approached by other organisations, some
in remote areas and some smaller organisations, and have started to plan a
program and have then had to pull it either because they have not had the
support higher up in their organisation to get us through or because of a lack
of funding.[181]
3.191
Like Beyondblue, Black Dog Institute seeks to tailor its programs to the
employer. Dr Barnes described how programs are individualised:
If someone approaches us then we do quite a bit of work with
them to try and work out why they are approaching us ... We will have a couple
of meetings with them to make sure that the content is going to be addressing
those issues there.[182]
3.192
While some companies approach organisations like Beyondblue and Black
Dog Institute proactively to run their programs for health and economic
reasons, it could often be the case that they are called in post-crisis, after
an employee has suicided or been unwell and there have been issues around that.[183]
SANE Australia’s Mindful Employer Program: moving towards a preventative
and integrated workplace strategy
3.193
SANE Australia, the national mental health charity stressed the
importance of systemic and ongoing workplace education. This is not just
important amongst managers but also:
so that co-workers are knowledgeable, understanding and
supportive, because the best human resources practices can be sabotaged by
co-workers who do not understand why certain decisions are being made.[184]
3.194
To these ends, SANE Australia is developing its own workplace program,
called the Mindful Employer Program. The Program comprises components designed
to provide employers and employees with the skills and knowledge to effectively
respond to mental illness in the workplace.[185]
3.195
Unlike Beyond Blue and Black Dog Institute’s approach to education and
training via short workshops, the Mindful Employer Program packages a range of
services that look at overall policies in the workplace, education and support
for people with mental illness.[186]
3.196
SANE Australia also issues workplaces a certificate to advertise they have
been found to be mindful employers. These certificates provide:
public recognition for all people in the workplace as well as
the outside world that [employers] have considered this issue, that it is
supportive and understanding and that wants to make sure that they keep good
people at work so that they have the best possible workers...[187]
3.197
The Mindful Employer Program is relatively new. Ms Hocking said that one
workplace had signed up for the program, with two or three about to review the
licensing arrangement.[188] This includes talks
with government departments. SANE Australia noted that Centrelink had shown an
interest.[189] SANE Australia also
indicated that is working in partnership with the Australian Human Resources
Institute to develop and pilot learning modules to present to workplaces that
are already very interested.[190]
Employer advocates
3.198
SANE Australia and others, including Mental Illness Fellowship Victoria
and Orygen Youth Health, endorsed the role that employee advocates, like
disability employment providers and employment consultants, play in assisting a
job seeker with a mental illness to enter and maintain employment.[191]
3.199
SANE Australia noted:
the specialist employment agencies are so important because
their role is to find the right job for the right skills and the right person.[192]
3.200
Ms Collister, General Manager, Rehabilitation Services, Mental Illness
Fellowship Victoria said of:
The employment consultant – an individual approach is
absolutely critical in making a relationship with the employer.[193]
3.201
Many employers need a go-to-person as much as employees for advice on
how best to assist their employees. Employers can obtain assistance through a
range of means, by calling government hotlines like JobsAccess or Jobs in
Jeopardy, their organisation’s EAP, and advocacy or peak bodies like Sane
Australia, Beyond Blue or Australia Psychological Society. They can also call
upon employer associations like chambers of commerce for advice.
3.202
Ms Marcia Kuhne, Manager, Industrial Relations Policy, CCI WA reported
an increase over the past two years in contact from employers seeking advice on
how to deal with employees manifesting mental health issues.[194]
3.203
According to Comcare, it is a misnomer that employers are reticent about
this issue and seeking help. In their experience, the opposite is true:
Our employers, big business are very aware of this
problem....that it hits their bottom line, that they need to invest in their
people and they are very committed to better outcomes and they come knocking on
our door.[195]
3.204
Ms Kuhne said the Chamber suggested to members that ‘it is appropriate that
they seek advice from experts as to how [those issues be] managed.’[196]
3.205
The Australian Human Rights Commission recommended that ‘diversity field
officers’ be located in various industry groups and associations across
Australia:
...as many employers feel more comfortable contacting someone
known to them in the first instance to ask specific questions about employment
and disability.[197]
3.206
While this is a matter of resourcing for those organisations, it is
worth recalling ACCI’s commendation of the benefits to their organisation of having
a dedicated officer to facilitate workforce participation for mature-aged employees,
and the extrapolation that similar benefits might extend if a dedicated officer
were to be employed to facilitate greater workforce participation of employees
with mental ill health.
Targeted and multi-faceted workplace solutions
3.207
The following sections highlight the creative, practical and collaborative
approaches that some organisations are taking, in integrating advice from
experts into their human resources and organisational practices. These
strategies are characterised by being targeted, multi-faceted and comprehensive.
Such visionary approaches exemplify directions that employers might take to
achieve better employment and retention of workers with mental ill health.
3.208
Ms Susan Robertson, Managing Director, Edge Employment Solutions, the
largest disability employment service in Western Australia, emphasised that the
majority of jobs secured for clients are in large businesses and the public
sector (62 per cent combined). In her view, these two sectors offer good human
resources practices for employees with a mental illness because of:
good training and development opportunities, opportunities
for career enhancement, good support in terms of the range of co-workers that
work around that person in employment, and the range of tasks that can be brought
together to construct a suitable job for a person with mental health issues.[198]
3.209
Ms Robertson said that jobs in the public sector and large businesses
tended to have the best long term employment prospects for Edge clients, with
an average tenure of 17.34 months in the public sector, followed by 14 months
in large business.[199]
3.210
The remainder of this chapter will outline the approach of one public
sector organisation, the Department of Defence and two large businesses,
Abigroup Construction and Rio Tinto.
Public sector to lead by example
3.211
National Disability Services and others called for the Government to
‘lead by example’ to improve public sector employment of people with a
disability. According to NDS:
The public service employment rate of people with a disability
at 3.1 per cent is the lowest in over a decade...and significantly lower than
the proportion of people with disability within the population (20 per cent).[200]
3.212
Mrs Melissa Williams, Manager, Gold Coast Employment Services, made the
same call to all levels of government, including local government:
Government at all levels needs to lead by example in
employment of people with psychiatric disabilities and they all have a very,
very poor track record. We have tried and tried and tried to get into our local
council here and we get knocked back, without going into all our different
attempts.[201]
3.213
The Australian Human Rights Commission agreed and recommended that the
Commonwealth Government develop a strategy to increase public sector employment
of people with a disability. Suggested measures to achieve this include:
n a proportion of public service graduate recruitment
places are reserved for graduates with disability…
n recruitment targets for employees with disability are
set by all public sector agencies. As an example, the ACT Government recently
launched the ACT Public Service Employment Strategy which includes a target to
double the number of public servants with disabilities over the next four years;
n creation of apprenticeship, traineeship and work
experience opportunities for people with disability;
n recruitment agencies contracted by APS agencies, as a
requirement of their contract, are encouraged and supported to identify
applicants with disability; and
n the development of a comprehensive support and capacity
building programme for employees with disability and their public sector
employers. This could include:
Þ a
specific pool of funds for training opportunities for employees with
disability;
Þ all
employees with disability to be given the opportunity to be matched with a
mentor during their term of employment.[202]
3.214
National Disability Services noted rules, effective from 2010, intended
to make it easier for Australian Public Service (APS) agencies to employ
someone with a disability. These include disability employment service
providers assisting the employer by offering ongoing support to the employee:
The compulsory use of a disability employment service
provider when employing a person with disability relieves government agencies
of the need to develop their own expertise in assessing the capability of a
prospective employee, in designing and modifying a position to suit their
capability and in providing ongoing support if required.[203]
Comcare
3.215
Comcare implements Commonwealth Government policies in federal workplaces
and administers the Comcare scheme, which provides access to compensation for
eligible injured workers.[204]
3.216
Mr Neil Quarmby, General Manager, Work Health and Safety Group, Comcare
noted that in addition to covering all the government departments and agencies,
Comcare is a broad ranging scheme, that, for instance, includes 30
self-insurers, namely big private companies that have opted into the system:
We have a number of the big banks such as Commonwealth Bank.
We have 80 per cent of the line-haul transport systems, the big companies,
Linfox, K&S Freighters for example.[205]
3.217
Comcare indicated that one of its priorities is improving the mental
health, wellbeing and resilience of workers in the Comcare scheme and to tackle
the problem of psychological injury resulting from stress in the workplace,
because:
Mental health is becoming a major cause of disability in the
scheme with serious productivity consequences for employers.[206]
3.218
Comcare reported that workers’ compensation claims together with the
costs of treating psychological conditions has risen in recent years,
especially in the Australian Public Service (APS) where in figures to 30 June
2010:
n around 11 per cent of
all accepted claims within Australian Government premium payers involved mental
disease as either a primary or secondary condition; and
n around 43 per cent of
the total cost of accepted claims related to these claims.[207]
3.219
While Comcare speculated some of the reasons for this increase might include
an increased awareness in the community about mental health and general
pressures resulting from modern day living, ‘the drivers for this increase are
as yet unknown.’[208]
3.220
In recognition of the large numbers of people affected and in an attempt
to reverse the trend, Comcare stated that it has:
shifted to a more proactive mode. In the past our system,
like other similar jurisdictions, operated in a very reactive mode so you wait
for the individual to get hurt; then you try to support them, work on their
compensation and you investigate and tell the employer what they should have
done to stop that person getting hurt in the first place. Through our 2015
strategic plan...we have largely shifted away to operate more fundamentally in
a preventative capacity working with employers, the unions, employees,
practitioners and a range of support people to actually build a work
environment where health is promoted and harm is prevented.[209]
3.221
Comcare described its approach:
We have been working very closely with employers in our
scheme. We have a range of resources. We have line management training in
mental health. We are also seeking to move further upstream...to try to create
work environments that enable people with mental illness to stay in employment because,
whilst there has been a lot of discussion around seeking to get people at the
threshold of entering employment, there is huge capacity to really be creating
workplaces that are more proactive in responding to enable people to stay at
work with mental illness rather than falling out of employment or into the
compensation system and being able to prevent that unnecessary disability and
work loss that results from people leaving.[210]
3.222
Comcare cited its Centre for Excellence in Mental Health and Wellbeing,
which was established to provide strategic and practical strategies to improve
mental health at work. [211]The Centre has an
Advisory Group of experts that includes Associate Professors Eoin Killackey and
Peter Butterworth.[212]
3.223
Comcare’s criteria for workplaces that support mental health and
wellbeing are:
n workplaces
demonstrate a focus on mental health and work by establishing principles that
are integrated into work design, people management practices, business
processes, leadership and staff development programs;
n workplaces assess the
risks to mental health and wellbeing and take action to continuously improve
culture and systems at work;
n managers have
capability and support to help workers adapt to challenge and change and are
held accountable for this work;
n the work community is
able to recognise early warning signs and people have the confidence and
avenues to respond to mental ill health at work’
n managers seek to
understand issues that may impact on individual’s ability to work and make
adjustments to accommodate this;
n people at work are
involved in decisions on how their work is undertaken, including changes that
affect them directly;
n people at work have
guidelines, tools and support for performance improvement and are accountable
for their behaviours;
n mental health and
rehabilitation service are evidence based, improve functioning and foster
participation in work;
n people with longer
term incapacity for work due to mental ill health are offered pathways back to
employment;
n injured workers
experience of the compensation process is supportive and not detrimental to
mental health; and
n injured workers’ have
access t o information and support to optimise their involvement in recovery
and return to work.[213]
3.224
Ms Christine Bolger, Director, Work Care, Comcare pointed to the
importance of the Centre and these criteria:
I think that gives a really strong direction on
characteristics of work and the type of line management support and assistance
that is needed to keep people working.[214]
3.225
Ms Bolger added that the Centre intends to draw on the breadth of
community practice that is already there, rather than ‘reinvent the wheel’. She
said:
Comcare has linkages with the ANU and a lot of the service
providers in this area as well.[215]
3.226
The principles of prevention and early intervention, espoused by Comcare,
and the importance of collaborative partnerships underpin the following
case-studies.
Department of Defence
3.227
The Department of Defence is the largest Commonwealth Government agency.
It consists of 84,000 members of the Australian Defence Force and 23,000 civilian
public service employees.[216]
3.228
Major General Fogarty, Head, People Capability stated that Defence had undergone
a huge organisational shift in recent years. He observed:
Attitudes towards mental health in our department have changed
significantly over the last five to seven years, for example, great emphasis is
now placed on keeping our people, not discharging them.[217]
3.229
Mr David Morton, General Manager, Mental Health, Psychology and
Rehabilitation concurred:
We have addressed this issue about discharge. We have taken
that fear away.
Still being able to be deployed whilst you are rehabilitating
or being treated is another big, important part.[218]
3.230
Major Fogarty stated:
We view psychological injury as an occupational hazard and it
is therefore contemplated by our Defence OH&S management system. Our
system has 17 elements, including notification, treatment, rehabilitation and
compensation, and this covers both the APS employees as well as the ADF
members. We also maintain a comprehensive fairness and resolution framework
that recognises the importance and the value of diversity and equity in all our
workplaces within Defence.[219]
3.231
While some initiatives are relevant to both civilian and military
workforces, such as suicide awareness and drug and alcohol issues training, Major
Fogarty described other programs that are designed specifically for the ADF component.
One such program is called BattleSMART – a self-management resilience training
regime for high stress operations environments.[220]
Complementing BattleSMART is a trial of the FamilySMART program which
recognises that families are also an important part of the equation.[221]
3.232
Major Fogarty referred to Defence’s development of a psychological
health strategy for its civilian arm to reduce the incidence and severity of
work related psychological injury.[222]
3.233
Mr Neil Tomkin, First Assistant Secretary, Defence People Solutions,
Department of Defence noted that there has been an increase in the number and
cost of psychological illness and injury in recent years:
we have seen an increase from 2007, with 12 per cent of
accepted compensable claims being for mental stress rising to over 14 per cent
in more recent years...in 2010, there [was] a substantial increase to an
average [cost] of $216, 000.[223]
3.234
Defence is keen to reverse this trend and its attendant loss in
productivity. The Department has prepared and disseminated a range of
educational materials to guide managers, supervisors and human resources
practitioners as part of its focus on prevention and early intervention. A complementary
pro-active intervention program comprises:
Early Case Management Assessment Tool called ECMAT)...[that]
provides an ongoing commitment to high-risk case managing between Defence case
managers and Comcare claims managers...MD guideline licenses for our case
managers [so they have access to the latest evidence based clinical
guidance]...and a strategic intervention team to manage the most complex
medical and rehabilitation cases.[224]
3.235
Mr David Morton, General Manager, Mental Health, Psychology and
Rehabilitation, Defence, described the ADF’s mental health reform program,
following the 2009 Dunt Mental Health Review which identified some gaps.[225]
The adoption of a new ‘continuum of care’ approach:
Supports capability through mental fitness and takes a
positive approach to the notion of mental health whilst recognising that we
reduce the stigma that prevents people from identifying themselves early enough
to seek treatment.[226]
3.236
As a response to the Dunt report recommendations, a dedicated mental
health psychology and rehabilitation branch has been established to integrate
the program at a national level. Mr Morton advised that there had been a number
of additional appointments at Joint Health Command to bring into being their
new integrated approach:
We get an integrated approach by putting our mental health
professionals, our rehab professionals, into the primary healthcare teams and
in that way trying to achieve a breakdown in stigma...so somebody is presenting
to the one service...so that you are taking a whole-of-person look at the
situation.[227]
3.237
Other key elements of the Defence approach include the use of peer
support programs, identifying champions willing to talk about their experiences
in overcoming mental illness and successful navigation through rehabilitation
programs, and, perhaps, most importantly, reframing the language used to talk
about mental health, from having negative and weak connotations to positive and
strong ones:
The notion of leading the discussion around, ‘We want you to
come forward and tell us about your mental health problems, ’is a bit of a
downer. You heard me before start to use the term ‘mental fitness’. To
encourage command and encourage middle and junior leadership to start
recognising that mental fitness is as important as physical fitness you start
to then get a different balance opportunity created there.[228]
3.238
Mr Morton emphasised how important it is to integrate this positive
language into a command structure. Commanders’ understanding and belief in the
message that, ‘you can do something about this; it is about recovery’ is
integral to the message trickling down and through the organisation. Mr Morton
indicated this was happening and supported by senior leadership in Defence.[229]
3.239
In line with a proactive approach, Major Fogarty concluded by saying
that, ‘We are continuing to test, evaluate and adjust.’[230]
3.240
Mr Tomkins said Defence had been pleased with the level of collaboration
it had undertaken with Comcare in respect of mental health promotion but noted
that more collaborative work in this area is required:
Our concern has been that, as the employer we can do more
through collaborative work between agencies to help employees.[231]
Private sector to lead by example
3.241
Like the public sector, the private sector should lead by example too.
Mr Tawanda Machingura, Assistant Director of Occupational Therapy, Gold Coast
Health Service, Queensland Health said:
One of the things I think would be useful if employers
talking to other employers or talking about some of those good stories in the
media-about how some of their employees who have a mental illness have done so
well. I hope that will go a long way in reducing stigma in our community.[232]
3.242
The following companies do just this.
Abigroup Inc.
We have essentially normalised the discussion...It is just
like any other physical injury that people would want to talk about....as soon
as you make the space safe and comfortable for [people] to talk, they talk....I
am not going to sit here and say that there is not still a stigma that exists
in our organisations – it still does, in pockets – but we are slowly chipping
away.[233]
3.243
Ms Sarah Marshall, National Environmental and Sustainability Manager, Abigroup
sketched the scope of Abigroup’s business, to set the scene:
Abigroup is one of Australia’s leading and most diverse national
construction contractors. We have over 50 years experience in roads, rails,
buildings, mining, tunnels, bridges, energy and communications across
Australia. We are part of the Lend Lease Group, and we have offices across
Australia....It owns and operates one of the largest plant equipment fleets in
the southern hemisphere, operates its own precast yards and has its own
in-house expertise and blue collar work force...Abigroup has 3000
employees...Of those employees, 83 percent are male.[234]
3.244
Abigroup signed a memorandum of understanding with Beyondblue in 2010 to
develop a DVD of the lived experience of depression and anxiety disorders in
the construction industry that could be used by Abigroup and others in the
construction industry. [235]
3.245
The collaboration came about following a workshop with Abigroup directors
and managers in 2008 who saw a need for increased awareness in the workforce
and wanted to encourage their workers to seek help early but had not come
across any material to-date that seemed tailored to their industry:
The construction industry is a unique industry and has a very
strong culture and we could not find in all of the evidence or material we were
looking at anything that really talked to our industry...to the culture and the
male dominated workforce that we have.
So we developed our own. We tailored the Beyondblue national
workforce program for delivery to workers in Abigroup construction sites as a
pilot....as well as delivering the existing national workplace program to over
600 Abigroup office-based staff.[236]
3.246
The DVD called ‘Building Strong Foundations’ features four case-studies
of male employees in different jobs within the organisation (a bricklayer,
engineer, foreman and union official), spanning their 20s, 30s and 70s, talking
about their experiences of living with a mental illness, the problems they had
had at work and how they sought help to get better.
3.247
Mr Rhett Foreman, a General Foreman at Abigroup, who appears on the DVD
relayed why he had volunteered to be part of the DVD:
Putting yourself out there – and my family were in it...is a
pretty bold step...But I thought: You’ve got to put your hand up...it’s getting
the message out and helping other people - and the construction industry
certainly needs it.[237]
3.248
The DVD has been an enormous success. According to Mr Foreman:
The feedback has been overwhelmingly positive...the main
thing is it empowers people to put their hand up and they do not feel like they
are on their own.[238]
3.249
The DVD is used in different ways. There is a shorter version, a 7
minute promo used in employee inductions and the longer DVD is played on
loop-play in crib sheds. Mr Foreman described the DVD as a sort of conversation
starter ‘the DVD is the key in the door...and it has raised a lot of awareness.’[239]
3.250
Abigroup also described collaboration with Mates In Construction,
Boystown and Movember. Mates In Construction (MIC) is a Queensland based
organisation, supported by Queensland Health and others established to raise awareness
about suicide and mental health amongst building and construction workers.
3.251
The MIC suicide prevention program was developed because of the concern
that up to one in twenty construction workers will contemplate suicide during
any given year. The program provides general suicide awareness and training for
construction site workers as well as ongoing support for trained on-site
‘connectors’ (identified with a sticker on their hardhat) whose role is to
identify at risk workers and link them to MIC case managers as well as
facilitate on-site mental health and well-being events.[240]
3.252
Mr Foreman praised MIC’s general awareness training on suicide and
having MIC connectors on Abigroup sites. He explained how it works in practice:
We had a guy come to our office at six o’clock the other
morning when all us managers were talking and he said, ‘I want to talk about
some issues.’ ...He left in a huff and the boss said, ‘See if you can grab
him.’ I said, ‘Come in here, come into my office, here is the Mates in Construction
1300 number. Talk to them, I’ll leave you alone for a while and then we’ll
have a chat. I went off and grabbed one of the connectors...and he talked to
the guy and his boss was very supportive and then the guy was okay after about
an hour, he went to work, went to some counselling.[241]
3.253
The success of the program lies in what Mr Foreman describes as ‘coming
at the issues at different angles’. The DVD is one component, having MIC
connectors on site is another (so far this has been happening only in Queensland
but Abigroup is considering rolling out the program nationally). Ms Marshall
summarised her approach to mental health training:
If you had someone who fell over and sprained their wrist or
ankle [at work] about one in five would know what to do...My approach is
that...if we have one in five out of our workforce that knows, ‘This is looking
like a mental health problem, starting to see some changes in their behaviour,
this is what I am going to do, I am going to direct them to help that is our
approach.[242]
3.254
Perhaps at the heart of Abigroup’s success is recognition and ownership from
management that mental health is a common issue amongst employees, that it is
something they address in a number of ways, as part of the regular working day.
Mr Foreman mentioned how impressed he had been at his job interview for
Abigroup, when in the waiting room he had read an article in the company
newsletter about management presenting a sum of money to Beyondblue. He said
this emboldened him to reveal in the job interview that he had himself suffered
mental illness. He stated:
I thought, ‘If you’re putting this in a national newsletter
and leaving that down at front reception for people to read, you’ve obviously
put a lot of thought into it and there’s a really good culture behind that.[243]
Rio Tinto and Dampier Salt
The vast majority of our employment process is around the
individual’s capability to do the job, irrespective of their physical or mental
health capacity.[244]
A classic example is that we employ a lot of people who are
ex-ADF [some of whom have post-traumatic stress disorder]...Typically they are
very good leaders with very good skills. Yes, sometimes things that will happen
that will trigger problems for them that we have to manage, and it is far
easier to manage those situations if we know about them...we can work with
them....so they can continue to be a valued employee.[245]
Our general situation is the same whether it is mental health
or physical health.[246]
3.255
Rio Tinto establishes mines and processes mineral resources. In addition
to a strong presence in Australia and North America, the company has
significant businesses in Asia, Europe, Africa and South America. Rio Tinto
has some 70,000 employees, 20,000 of whom are in Australia.[247]
3.256
Rio Tinto is the leading iron ore exporter in Australia (and the second
largest in the world). Rio Tinto’s iron ore operations are concentrated in the
Pilbara region of Western Australia where annual capacity stands at 225 million
tonnes, with plans to expand. [248]
3.257
Dampier Salt (DSL), a member of the Rio Tinto Group, is the world’s
largest solar salt producer, producing in excess of 10 million tonnes each
year. DSL has two operations in the Pilbara (Dampier and Port Hedland) and one
in the Gascoyne region (Lake Macleod) of Western Australia.[249]
Dampier Salt has 506 employees.[250]
3.258
Rio Tinto Group recognises mental health is a workforce issue, with the
potential to impinge on workers’ safety performance, employment costs and
productivity, both directly and indirectly.’[251]
3.259
Rio Tinto detailed the range of supports it typically offers to
employees and their families if an employee is suffering from a mental illness:
This includes the provision of EAPs and opportunities for
staged return to work rehabilitation programmes. Rio Tinto’s The Way We Work
sits at the centre of policy, and ensures that all Rio Tinto businesses ensure
that all people are given opportunities for training and success in their role,
free of discrimination and harassment.[252]
We provide them with general awareness training...and
training on [how to access the EAP program].[253]
3.260
Broader health and safety strategies and programs include:
n wellness programs
targeting fatigue management, sleep screening, health risk assessments, health
campaigns and social activities;
n health insurance
assistance in the form of a medical subsidy;
n family engagement
opportunities such as Fly In Fly Out family visits to site, family recreation
passes; and
n policies and
procedures ie. bullying and drug and alcohol policy.[254]
3.261
In addition , Rio Tinto:
supports on the ground health-related initiatives such as
the development of the Paraburdoo Men’s Shed, youth programmes and providing
in-kind accommodation for counselling services.[255]
3.262
Dr Andrew Porteous, Manager, Corporate Health and Safety, Rio Tinto said
that mental health issues had traditionally received little attention in the
mining industry and the nature of support had been ‘primarily reactive’. [256]
3.263
However, as Rio Tinto continues to expand operations and there is
‘fierce competition for personnel’ in the mining sector, the company is
increasingly:
Committed to finding new ways to help our workforce manage
mental health and resilience by building and sustaining a supportive and health
working culture.[257]
3.264
Dr Goldsworthy, CEO of Dampier Salt agreed and confirmed senior management’s
commitment to these policies.[258]
3.265
Dr Porteous referred to Rio Tinto’s and Dampier Salt’s adoption of the
UK Health and Safety Executive’s Management Standards for Workplace Stress[259]
as a basic for some of the company’s approaches to mental health.[260]
3.266
Ms Denise Goldsworthy, CEO, Dampier Salt described the Mental Health
Strategy Pilot’s overall aim:
To bring a more holistic approach to mental health care to
ensure its inclusion in induction and training programs and to integrate mental
health into occupational health and safety policies and practices.[261]
3.267
Ms Goldsworthy indicated that while there have been some successes with
the company’s reactive support programs, the group believes it can do better:
While Rio Tinto’s proactive mental health strategies are only
in their initial stages, they are the first step towards achieving better
outcomes for our employees through supporting them to increase their resilience
to mental illness or to manage their illnesses in a more integrated way.[262]
3.268
She said that the pilot presents a unique opportunity for the company to
look at mental health in a mining workforce, seek to identify and address
organisational factors which may contribute to reduced mental health – and to
potentially feed those lessons from a smaller business back into the larger Rio
Tinto Group.[263]
3.269
Rio Tinto hopes that, resulting from this approach, employees will be better
able to recognise mental health problems in themselves and each other and have
enhanced access to mental health support if needed. Such a strategy might also contribute
to:
Improved morale...increased workforce stability with higher
retention rates; reduced absenteeism...improved status as a preferred
employer...and improved production and profitability.[264]
3.270
Ms Goldsworthy outlined how the pilot will work. Commencing in late 2011
and running for three years the project comprises four phases:
Commitment, consultation, engagement and maintenance followed
by a well-defined evaluation and review process.[265]
3.271
To date, some baseline data has been collected which indicates areas of
strength and weakness:
the sorts of areas of strength that have been identified
include...realistic work expectations...and on the job peer-support...
At the other end of the scale, opportunities for improvement
include more training for our front-line supervisors...and improved means for
accessing flexible work practices.[266]
3.272
Rio Tinto emphasised that it is seeking a collaborative approach to
change and to work together with a range of partners to increase community
awareness and reduce the stigma associated with mental illness. These partners
might include governments, health professionals and private industry.
3.273
In addition to working to redress the shortages of health professionals
in regional Australia Ms Goldsworthy suggested:
television and radio campaigns...and sponsorship of
conferences or workshops where specialists can talk to employers as well as
where employers can share best practice.[267]
Australasian Centre for Remote and Rural Mental Health
3.274
One of Rio Tinto’s major partners is the Australasian Centre for Remote
and Rural Mental Health (ACRRMH). They outlined their role in the Dampier Salt
pilot:
this pilot was proposed and is being facilitated by the
Australasian Centre using the Centre’s mental health roadmap for the mining and
resources centre.[268]
3.275
Dr Jennifer Bowers, CEO, Australasian Centre for Rural and Remote Mental
Health (the Centre) detailed the Centre’s commitment to practical mental health
and wellbeing outcomes in regional and remote Australia, with a focus on helping
those who work in the mining and resources sector, where she says understanding
has to date been, at best ‘embryonic.’[269]
3.276
The Centre organised two seminal forums in Coolum and Perth to raise
greater awareness in the mining sector of the impact of mental health on
productivity and profit. Dr Bowers observed that the forums were attended not
only by senior mining executives, but also mental health professionals, indigenous
representatives, communication experts and researchers. Mining companies and
the WA Government came on board:
As a result of these forums the Centre began work with three
mining businesses on the development of mental health strategies. The Centre
was engaged by the Western Australian Department of Mines and Petroleum to work
with their mine safety inspectors on mental health.[270]
3.277
Like other witnesses, Dr Bowers referred to the varying success of
reactive strategies to mental health in the workplace like EAPs and general
awareness-building programs.[271]
3.278
By contrast, the Centre works with the mining and resources sector to
design individualised mental health ‘road maps’ for organisations:
Long-term partnerships in which, together, we develop, implement
and monitor whole-of-business mental health strategy which incorporates
recruitment, induction, human resources and occupational health and safety
policies and practices.[272]
3.279
In practice this means focusing on primary and secondary interventions
which are by their nature, inherently, more proactive. She explained:
In a primary intervention the Centre uses a series of devices
and techniques to make mental health a safe topic in the workplace and/or social
community context. These devices can include musical performances, art based
activities, brochures, on-site consultations, forums, informal workshops and
discussions...secondary interventions are characterised by more formal
workshops, presentations, briefings and review of policies, along with...posters,
booklets and discreet, wallet-sized helpline and website cards. The centre has
also designed a lifestyle and well-being survey...to target new interventions.[273]
3.280
According to Dr Bowers, research unanimously supports primary and secondary
interventions as providing greater cost-effectiveness to businesses than
tertiary interventions. She cited a UK report:
That even a small shift in expenditure from treatment to
prevention promotion generated very significant energy gains and a broad range
of payoffs and benefits that lasted for many years.[274]
3.281
Entrenched cultural and attitudinal changes in the workplace are not
easily overcome. Dr Bowers stressed the importance of sustained commitment from
the top down in overcoming a head-in–the-sand approach:
It does need commitment, as has been demonstrated in the
companies we are working with, from the top, and it needs leadership...and some
ability for people to engage down the line.[275]
3.282
Dr Bowers enthused about the interest and commitment that she is seeing
in the mining industry. She praised the leadership of the Department of Mines
and Petroleum in Western Australia and all the mining companies from across
Western Australia who participated in and actively contributed to presentations
and exercises during a recent road show throughout WA:
The anecdotes and stories that we received on the ground were
quite moving, and, on the other hand, motivating.[276]
Discovering and sharing best human resources practice
3.283
Targeted, integrated and comprehensive programs that look after the mental
health of all employees, such as those undertaken by organisations like
Defence, Abigroup and RioTinto, exemplify progressive ways forward for
employers and employees alike.
3.284
Despite their different business focuses, public sector (operational and
civilian) versus private sector (construction and resources), what these
organisations all have in common is the implementation of proactive strategies,
policies and interventions that are clearly having demonstrable results.
3.285
At the heart of each is a focus on retaining good employees, maintaining
a productive workforce, and having workers give each other a fair go. They
also, importantly, treat mental health as a mainstream issue which contributes
to a broader de-stigmatisation agenda.
3.286
Dr Geoffrey Waghorn spoke about the potential for changing workplace
culture:
What’s really exciting about this work is that, when you do
succeed, everybody is amazed. The employer is amazed; the clinical team and
psychiatrists are amazed; and their client and family are amazed. It brings
home our Australian values really strongly when we can achieve this, because it
changes the culture of the workplace. The workplace then learns that helping
workers with mental illness is no different to helping all the other workers.
It is just how much you get flexible and tailor the work circumstances to the
person. So they really learn nothing except that good HR practices work for
everybody.[277]
3.287
The Committee notes the variety of service providers that deliver generic,
and, in some cases, tailored programs in this space for a wide range of
organisations (from Beyondblue and Sane Australia to mental health first aid
schemes and Comcare). Currently, the programs appear to operate fairly independently
from each other. There may be scope for greater collaboration and coordination
of the work each are doing in this space.
3.288
Further, Comcare, Defence, Abigroup and RioTinto have all indicated
their willingness to share aspects of their own experiences and successes, best
practice and lessons learnt.
3.289
This sharing of experiences is already happening. For instance, Abigroup
has worked with the Committee for Economic Development of Australia (CEDA) to
develop a discussion forum around the issue of addressing mental health in the
workplace. Beyondblue also participated at that event, which was available to
CEDA member organisations.[278]
3.290
Some government departments and agencies are doing more than others in
this area. A number bring in an external provider like Beyondblue for employee
training through the National Workplace Program. Few go to the lengths that
Defence has. Yet, many witnesses emphasised that the Commonwealth public
service as a major employer should take more of a leadership role in this area.
Recommendation 9 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth Government
take a lead role in implementing best practice as an employer that looks
after the mental health and wellbeing of employees, including the employment
and retention of people with a mental illness. |
3.291
Referencing the good work that Commonwealth departments and agencies are
doing to support good mental health might form a core component part of the national
anti stigma campaign recommended in Chapter one.
3.292
The national stigma reduction campaign should also draw on the
experience of large employers doing good work in this space (such as those
outlined in this chapter), and small to medium sized enterprises too.