Views

Large employers plan to do more to support mental health in 2020

Mental Health Benefits.4point0.8.26.19.png

In 2019, deaths from drugs, alcohol and suicide in the United States reached all-time highs while health care costs soared — and many employers have taken notice. Unsatisfied with the status quo, a growing number of major companies this year have actively embraced providing their workforces with benefits to support behavioral health and emotional well-being. From Starbucks and Chipotle to Apple, 2019 ushered in a new era of destigmatizing mental health and wellness in the workplace.

In 2020, there are three key trends we can expect to see related to employers’ efforts to drive transparency, acceptance and support for employees’ mental health and overall well-being.

A commitment to supporting quality care for millennial mental health challenges.
Millennials are more engaged and more open about their mental health struggles than previous generations and they are also more likely to expect mental health benefits from their employers. As recent research shows, this support couldn’t come soon enough: 50% of millennials report having left a job due to mental health reasons and greater declines in both mental and physical health have been reported among the demographic.

We’re already seeing employers seeking to address millennials’ needs by offering beefed-up mental health support. Companies are increasingly considering ways to supplement the mental health care options offered under their health plans, whose directories are often filled with unavailable providers or therapists who are no longer in-network. Employers also want alternatives to low-cost employee assistance programs (EAPs), which are “often very limited in the offerings they provide,” according to a 2019 report on workforce mental health.

While traditional EAPs typically offer just a handful of counseling sessions, a growing number of prominent employers — including eBay, Roche, and NetApp — are offering mental health benefits that cover a higher number of therapy sessions and wider range of treatment options, including therapy and mental health coaching. This deeper investment in high-quality, comprehensive care gives companies the resources they need to respond to millennial employees’ needs.

A focus on flexible, proven mental health benefit options.
With fierce competition for top talent and more employees shifting to remote work in 2020, workers’ demands for flexibility will increasingly extend to mental health benefits. As a result, companies will design benefit plans that meet the realities of employees’ lives. This means offering mental health care options that are accessible to everyone, regardless of their schedules, where they work or their level of care needs.

To best serve a workforce that expects flexible and accessible benefits, more employers will look to a spectrum of behavioral health care options. That includes offering a range of treatments, from self-care apps for employees experiencing occasional stress to in-person and virtual therapy sessions and prescription medication to treat common, diagnosable conditions such as anxiety or depression. As research shows, a mix of online interventions such as digital lessons and in-person or virtual therapy can lead to lower therapy dropout rates, plus higher rates of abstinence for clients with substance abuse issues.

A culture of openness, from the top down.
While there’s still plenty of work to be done, more employers today recognize the need to cultivate an accepting culture so that workers feel safe to disclose their mental health issues. Along with new benefits, company leaders are increasingly doing their part to embrace an open dialogue about mental health.

In 2020, more company leaders are likely to take a public stance on mental health, following in the footsteps of executives like Chuck Robbins, CEO of Cisco, who penned a company-wide email encouraging his 75,000 employees to “talk openly and extend compassion” about mental health. Joel Gascoigne, CEO of social media management platform Buffer, publicly shared his struggles with burnout this year and tweeted about seeing a therapist. Moves like these demonstrate corporate leaders’ commitment to their employees’ mental health and help people feel more comfortable taking advantage of the benefits available to them. This can be especially impactful in more traditional work cultures where being chained to a desk or available at all hours is seen as a badge of honor.

With all of the stressors and seemingly endless demands on our time today, it’s no wonder that nearly one in five U.S. adults deals with a mental health condition. Awareness of this reality is greater than it’s ever been, yet more than half of Americans still say they’ve never discussed mental health at work.

Meanwhile, there’s a growing movement of large companies ready to do their part to destigmatize mental health issues and knock down barriers to care. Building on this momentum in the year ahead will be crucial, and there has never been a better time for employers to invest in their most valuable asset — their people.

For reprint and licensing requests for this article, click here.
Behavioral Health Mental health benefits Healthcare issues Workplace culture Employee relations
MORE FROM EMPLOYEE BENEFIT NEWS