Training

Mental health courses

by Mark Rowe

On the eve of World Mental Health Day, the British Safety Council has unveiled its mental health training courses, designed to help businesses and their employees ‘start conversations’ about mental health issues.

The training, first announced at the BSC’s annual conference on October 4, has been developed in response to public recognition that poor mental health constitutes a significant problem in workplaces in Britain. In fact:

· ​Three out of four employees say they have experienced poor mental health (source: Business in the Community National Employee Mental Wellbeing Survey 2016).

· Every week, more than 100 people take their own lives in the UK (source: Mind).

The British Safety Council has developed these mental health courses:

Mental health ‘Start the Conversation’ for all employees – which is immediately available.
Mental health ‘Train the Facilitator’ which enables staff to deliver ‘Start the Conversation’ in-house. The course is immediately available.
Mental health ‘Managing the conversation’ for line managers. To be launched in January 2018.
Mental Health First Aid qualification. To be launched in January 2018.
‘Start the Conversation’, which is already being delivered to companies in the UK, is a 45-minute session which gets people thinking about mental health and talking about it. It aims to reduce the stigma surrounding mental health so that employees feel more comfortable talking about their feelings.

Adrian Vale, Educational Designer at the British Safety Council, says: “Our expert facilitators can visit your workplace and deliver up to seven ‘Start the Conversation’ sessions per day to groups of 20 employees. We can help employers raise mental health awareness among 140 staff in a single day.

“Our programme is unique. Most mental health training courses are half-day or one-day long. Many employers, particularly those with limited resources, are not able or willing to release several members of their staff for either a half-day or full-day mental health training course. That is the reason we have developed these 45-minute training sessions, which should meet the needs of all organisations and support their employees.”

About the BSC

Since 1957, the charity and membership organisation has been campaigning to keep workers healthy and safe. Led by its charismatic founder James Tye, the British Safety Council contributed to the creation of the Health and Safety at Work Act in 1974. It also helped to establish the British Wellness Council in 1979, which dealt with issues such as repetitive strain injuries and stress. More recently, it has focused its activities on workplace health and well-being, including mental health. In January 2017, British Safety Council helped to launch ‘Mates in Mind’, which provides support and training on mental health for the construction industry. Visit www.britsafe.org.

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