Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.
As awareness of workplace issues increases, employers offer more mental health services

Jan. 21—Fidelity Investments expanded its internal offerings for free therapist sessions.

Manufacturer Hypertherm saw enrollment in its employee assistance program triple.

And Community Mental Health set up "peer discussion groups" via Zoom for employees to share their concerns with outside clinicians.

Many employers across the state added mental health services or promoted existing programs as their workers coped with increased stress and isolation during the coronavirus pandemic.

The altered world ushered in a stronger emphasis on mental well-being in the workplace.

"The reality is COVID has had a profound impact on people's mental health," said Susan Stearns, executive director of National Alliance on Mental Illness-New Hampshire.

Stearns called the pandemic a "collective societal traumatic event."

"One thing isolation has really reinforced is we are social creatures," Stearns said. "A lot of social interaction happens in the workplace, right?"

The pandemic transformed how workers completed their tasks and interacted with one another.

Nearly 1 in 5 U.S. workers rated their mental health as fair or poor in a Gallup poll conducted last summer — and were absent from work more often.

"Projected over a 12-month period, workers with fair or poor mental health are estimated to have nearly 12 days of unplanned absences annually compared with 2.5 days for all other workers," Gallup said.

The missed work costs the U.S. economy an estimated $47.6 billion annually in lost productivity.

Four of 10 U.S. workers reported that their job had an adverse impact — either extremely negative (7%) or somewhat negative (33%) — on their mental health, Gallup said.

At Riverbend Community Mental Health in Concord, management also rented chair massagers several times for their 400-person workforce to take breaks.

"It gave people a sense of a dedicated half-hour of their day to have self-care on us," said Jaime Corwin, vice president of human resources. "That has been so popular, we're going to try and do that twice a year."

No age group immune

Workplace-related mental health issues aren't confined to any one generation.

Sandy Demarest has seen older workers experience feelings of anxiety, stress and fear during the pandemic.

"Because of anxiety in return to in-person working, many older workers in theory prefer working remotely," said Demarest, a mid-career and retirement coach at Demarest Directions in Milford.

"On the flip side, loneliness and isolation are at an all-time high for those later in life," she said. "So by working remotely, the benefit of connection through work takes on a new look and feel."