Health and Safety Executive Management Standards for Work-related Stress Scott O’Brien Policy...
-
Upload
daniela-horton -
Category
Documents
-
view
213 -
download
0
Transcript of Health and Safety Executive Management Standards for Work-related Stress Scott O’Brien Policy...
Health and Safety Executive
Management Standards for Work-related Stress
Scott O’Brien
Policy Advisor, HSE
Stress Priority Programme Team
Health and Safety Executive
Working within HSC’s strategy
• Sensible management of risk
• Offering advice and support
• Targeting resources on the biggest risks
• Communicating the strategy effectively
Health and Safety Executive
Where will this take us?
• Towards self-regulating businesses who invest in health and safety as an marker of positive organisational performance
• Towards a workplace culture where the business, moral and ethical cases for health and safety is recognised and accepted
Health and Safety Executive
Where is the stress programme now?
Step 1: Inform
Step 2: Educate
Step 3: Enforce
Step 4: Self-regulate
HSE recognises that organisations will
need help and support to do stress risk assessments –
but they should now be doing them
Health and Safety Executive
Where to start
• The Management Standards for work-related stress were launched on 3 November 2004
• They will help organisations to undertake a risk assessment
• They combine with HSE’s existing guidance:
• Real solutions, real people; and
• Tackling work-related stress: a managers’ guide
To form the Management Standards Approach
Health and Safety Executive
The Management Standards Approach
• The approach is not about eliminating stress entirely. Rather it encourage organisations to take pragmatic steps towards improving their workplace
• The Management Standards approach is targeted principally at medium to large employers
• Employee engagement is critical to the success of the Management Standards approach
• Consultation with the workforce and their representatives is the key to developing effective solutions
Health and Safety Executive
The Management Standards- Outline
• The Management Standards look at six areas of work: Demands, Control, Support, Relationships, Role and Change
• Each contains simple statements about what would be happening in an organisation achieving the Standards
• The Standards help organisations to prioritise areas of highest risk
• They are not designed to tackle individual responses or stress outside the workplace
Health and Safety Executive
The Management Standards- Process
• Gaining organisational buy in: senior managers, trades unions, line managers and staff
• An initial indicator tool survey across the workforce
• Follow up focus groups to verify the results of the indicator tool and develop solutions
• Implementation/intervention phase
• Review and results
Health and Safety Executive
Setting achieveable goals
Harm >
Nu
mb
ers
>
The current UK picture as reported by employees in
the OMNIBUS Survey (ONS) in February/March
2004
Top 20%
Health and Safety Executive
Achieving success
Harm >
Nu
mb
ers
>
Organisations are encouraged to move towards the reported
success of the top twenty percent of employers as
reported by their employees (2004)
Harm >
Nu
mb
ers
>
Top 20%
Health and Safety Executive
The Management Standards- Next steps
• Wider implementation – a logical approach
• Targeting resources to support key sectors
• Providing information and guidance to all employers
Health and Safety Executive
Coming up…
• New guidance for SMEs – a revised Work Positive pack developed in association with Health Scotland (HEBS)
• Upgraded online analysis tools
• Proactive support and guidance from HSE and partners
Health and Safety Executive
Any questions?
Scott O’Brien
Policy Advisor, HSE
Stress Priority Programme Team
www.hse.gov.uk/stress
scott.o’[email protected]