stress

Member Article

What employers need to know about stress at work

Work-related stress is an adverse reaction suffered by people exposed to excessive pressures at work. The Labour Force Survey from the Office for National Statistics shows that it makes for over 40% of work related illnesses. On average people suffering from depression, anxiety or stress take about 24 days off work a year. That translates to 10.4 million working days lost in 2011/2012.

[The survey further revealed that the occupations with highest rates of total cases of work-related stress were health professionals (with the highest prevalence amongst nurses), social workers and teaching and educational professionals. Earlier this year, the Sarz Report has brought well known facts to light commenting that stress suffered by bankers reached almost unprecedented levels].

That is not good news for employers. Stress at work is a costly affair and hits businesses financially, but also has a negative influence on staff relationships, poor performance, staff turnover and leads to more management time being spent on resolving the issues arising from stress.

Historically, employees affected by stress had a choice of claims available in the Employment Tribunals. If the employment relationship was terminated as a result of the employee’s incapacity, the employee could bring a claim for unfair dismissal; if stress was prolonged, it could lead to depression, which in certain circumstances could be classified as disability under the Equality Act; employees who felt they were bullied or exposed to pressure often brought claims for harassment under the Protection from Harassment Act 1997.

Now, the choice is even wider and claims for ‘stress at work’ are becoming more prevalent in the Courts. Such cases are usually brought as personal injury negligence claims for breach of duty of care of the employee.

The Courts may sometimes be more attractive because of a longer limitation period. A claim in the Employment Tribunal, must be brought within 3 months, the limitation for personal injury claims is 3 years. Additionally the courts may, in certain circumstances, be more appealing venues because of the potential awards for psychiatric injuries, especially if as a result the employee is prevented from working for a long time or not able to ever return to their profession. These are often higher than the ‘injury to feelings awards’ awarded in the Employment Tribunal discrimination cases. [This has been more recently observed amongst bankers who after years of working extremely long hours start suffering the consequences of prolonged stress.] Finally the recent changes to cost rules have made the Courts an easier option for a personal injury case, especially with the introduction of a more favorable cost system for Claimants, where costs orders against them can be enforced only in very limited circumstances.

Until now, mental health issues were often stigmatised and the employees often suffered in secret giving different reasons for their absences. Growing social awareness and available assistance have made people aware that psychiatric illnesses can affect anybody at any stage of their lives. Employees are more likely to share their mental health issues with their employers, seek their help and also bring claims against them if they feel that the employers were responsible for their plight or failed to help them.

How can employers be responsible for their employees psychiatric injuries? The LFS provides an answer. It shows that work pressures such as extensive workload, too much responsibility, tight deadlines, lack of managerial support, work related violence and bullying are most frequently attributable to work-related stress.

This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Saunders Law .

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