Abstract

The rising burden of common mental disorders (CMDs) in employees requires strategies for prevention. No systematic data exist about how those involved perceive their roles, responsibilities, and interactions with other professional groups. Therefore, we performed a multi-professional standardized survey with health professionals in Germany. A self-administered questionnaire was completed by 133 occupational health physicians (OHPs), 136 primary care physicians (PCPs), 186 psychotherapists (PTs), and 172 human resource managers (HRMs). Inter alia, they were asked which health professionals working in the company health service and in the outpatient care or in the sector of statutory insurance agents should play a key role in the primary, secondary, and tertiary prevention of CMDs in employees. The McNemar test was used in order to compare the attributed roles among the professionals involved. With regard to CMDs, all the professional groups involved in this study declared OHPs as the most relevant pillar in the field of prevention. In primary prevention, HRMs regarded themselves, OHPs, and health insurance agents as equally relevant in terms of prevention. PTs indicated an important role for employee representatives in this field. In secondary prevention, PCPs were regarded as important as OHPs. HRMs indicated themselves as equally important as OHPs and PCPs. In tertiary prevention, only OHPs identified themselves as main protagonists. The other groups marked a variety of several professions. There is a common acceptance from the parties involved that might help the first steps be taken toward overcoming barriers, e.g., by developing a common framework for quality-assured intersectional cooperation in the field of CMD prevention in employees.

Highlights

  • Mental illness is responsible for the rising number of sickness-related absence and limited productivity at work, resulting in a significant loss of potential labor supply [1]

  • The research question that we focus on in this contribution was operationalized as: in your opinion, who should play a key role in the prevention of common mental disorders (CMD) in employees?

  • 54% of human resource managers (HRMs) worked in large enterprises with more than 250 employees, 38% worked in medium-sized enterprises (

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Summary

Introduction

Mental illness is responsible for the rising number of sickness-related absence and limited productivity at work, resulting in a significant loss of potential labor supply [1]. Around 20% of the working-age population in an average county of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) suffers from a clinical mental illness. Interventions for CMDs offered at the workplace have been proven to be successful in addressing employees at risk [6], reducing sickness absence [7], and minimizing recurrent sickness absence [8]. These data emphasize the vital importance of collaboration between professions and sectors

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