Estimating effects of individual-level workplace mental wellbeing interventions: cross-sectional evidence from the UK

Promotional mental health interventions have become increasingly common in British workplaces but evaluative research lacks methodological quality, adequate sample size, or is more concerned with economic outcomes than employee health. Recently, a critical scholarship has emerged in sociology that q...

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Main Author: Fleming, W
Format: Working paper
Language:English
Published: Wellbeing Research Centre 2023
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author Fleming, W
author_facet Fleming, W
author_sort Fleming, W
collection OXFORD
description Promotional mental health interventions have become increasingly common in British workplaces but evaluative research lacks methodological quality, adequate sample size, or is more concerned with economic outcomes than employee health. Recently, a critical scholarship has emerged in sociology that questions the labour and health politics of workplace ‘wellness’. This article presents quantitative research addressing these concerns by estimating the ‘treatment effect’ of mental health programmes using clustered Bayesian propensity score analysis with the ‘Britain’s Healthiest Workplace’ survey – a sample of 143 British organisations and 27,932 workers. The analysis estimates the effect of a range of common initiatives including: mindfulness, resilience training, stress management and wellbeing apps. No evidence is found to demonstrate that these strategies improve worker mental health across multiple employee mental health measures. This suggests that recent critical literature is right to be concerned and that convenient well-being strategies should be given less financial and institutional support.
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spelling oxford-uuid:6fa6e30c-60be-4c87-816f-2453ba8ac5cd2024-05-03T17:13:11ZEstimating effects of individual-level workplace mental wellbeing interventions: cross-sectional evidence from the UKWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:6fa6e30c-60be-4c87-816f-2453ba8ac5cdEnglishSymplectic ElementsWellbeing Research Centre2023Fleming, WPromotional mental health interventions have become increasingly common in British workplaces but evaluative research lacks methodological quality, adequate sample size, or is more concerned with economic outcomes than employee health. Recently, a critical scholarship has emerged in sociology that questions the labour and health politics of workplace ‘wellness’. This article presents quantitative research addressing these concerns by estimating the ‘treatment effect’ of mental health programmes using clustered Bayesian propensity score analysis with the ‘Britain’s Healthiest Workplace’ survey – a sample of 143 British organisations and 27,932 workers. The analysis estimates the effect of a range of common initiatives including: mindfulness, resilience training, stress management and wellbeing apps. No evidence is found to demonstrate that these strategies improve worker mental health across multiple employee mental health measures. This suggests that recent critical literature is right to be concerned and that convenient well-being strategies should be given less financial and institutional support.
spellingShingle Fleming, W
Estimating effects of individual-level workplace mental wellbeing interventions: cross-sectional evidence from the UK
title Estimating effects of individual-level workplace mental wellbeing interventions: cross-sectional evidence from the UK
title_full Estimating effects of individual-level workplace mental wellbeing interventions: cross-sectional evidence from the UK
title_fullStr Estimating effects of individual-level workplace mental wellbeing interventions: cross-sectional evidence from the UK
title_full_unstemmed Estimating effects of individual-level workplace mental wellbeing interventions: cross-sectional evidence from the UK
title_short Estimating effects of individual-level workplace mental wellbeing interventions: cross-sectional evidence from the UK
title_sort estimating effects of individual level workplace mental wellbeing interventions cross sectional evidence from the uk
work_keys_str_mv AT flemingw estimatingeffectsofindividuallevelworkplacementalwellbeinginterventionscrosssectionalevidencefromtheuk