Millions of workers will be the focus of New South Wales’ first ever summit aimed at developing a state-wide strategy to improve mental health in the workplace. Improving mental health strategies in the workplace would not only improve productivity, but also improve lives.

Adults spend more than one third of their lives at work, making this environment critically important to both their physical and mental health. “At any one time, one in six people of working age suffer from mental illness across Australia, which equates to 800,000 people in NSW, so this is a huge issue.”

instinct and reason conducted a study with 2000 NSW workplaces that looked at how well workplaces had incorporated mental health and wellbeing into their Workplace Health and Safety strategy. The report is found at:

http://www.safework.nsw.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0018/320139/Mentally-healthy-workplaces-in-NSW-benchmarking-tool-October-2017-SW08734.pdf

“Mental illness does not discriminate and can touch the lives of people anywhere, which is why prevention and early intervention strategies are key, and the workplace should not be an exception,” Mrs Davies said.

“This Mentally Healthy Workplaces strategy further demonstrates the NSW Government’s commitment to improving mental health across the state.”

Australia’s leading mental health experts will help develop the strategy and attend the summit with business leaders, union representatives and government officials.

The Summit is part of SafeWork NSW’s Work Health and Safety Roadmap for NSW 2022, a six-year plan that aims to reduce serious work-related injuries and illnesses, including mental illnesses, by 30 per cent.

The strategy will align closely with the NSW Government’s decade-long Living Well reform, which aims to shift the focus of mental health care from hospitals to the community.

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