Legal

Placing psychological wellbeing at the forefront of construction contracts

During Mental Health Awareness Week, Olivia Jenkins and Sunny Ramgolam share how construction companies can preemptively support employees’ mental health before serious problems arise.

Mental health
Societal stigma around mental health still prevents construction workers from accessing help services (Image: Marcos Calvo Mesa via Dreamstime.com)

When first reporting that more than a quarter of construction industry professionals surveyed had suicidal thoughts in 2020, CIOB identified stress as the most common cause of ill mental health. Workplace conditions including unrealistic deadlines, cost targets and inadequate toilet facilities were reported as particularly stressful. Despite that, nearly half of businesses surveyed did not have a mental wellbeing policy in place at that time.  

More recently, the cost-of-living crisis, the war in Ukraine and Covid-19 have added to the adverse effects of other known stressors attached to manual construction work, including long hours, intense physical labour and tight profit margins. Patterns of poor payment practices, project delays, cash flow issues and material shortages have also been factors across the supply chain since 2020.

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