COAP Home

Promoting Age Equality & Diversity in the West Midlands


Hays Diversity Online - Jobs and careers in the UK 

You are not logged in   Log In   Site Map 

   

DID YOU KNOW?

Back To Categories
Health & Wellbeing
 
Q.Health, Work and Well Being
A.There is growing evidence that health, work and wellbeing are closely and powerfully linked and need to be addressed together.

We’ve long known that work is the best route out of poverty. But the 2006 report, Is work good for your health and well-being? crucially found that work is also usually good for people’s health. People in work are generally healthier, while being in work can help people with a health condition to get better and returning to work from unemployment improves health. These positive effects apply to all age groups.

While some work can present a risk to health – and these risks need to be carefully managed – far more people gain health benefits from work than are negatively affected by it.

- People who are long-term unemployed or who have never worked are between two and three times more likely to have poor health than those in work.
- People are twice as likely to become psychologically distressed after going from work to unemployment.

Today there are still too many people who are unable to work due to ill health: 2.6 million people are currently claiming incapacity benefits – with 600,000 coming on to the benefit each year – while 1.4 million people aged 50-59 have already retired due to ill-health.

And it’s not just health which is an issue. The longer someone is out of work because of ill-health, the lower their chance of getting back into work.

- If you've been off sick for six months, you have an 80% chance of being off for five years.
- 90% of people beginning a claim for incapacity benefits expect to return to work, but once someone has been claiming for two years or more, they are more likely to retire or die than return to work.

With 1 million people reporting sick each week, businesses are suffering too. The Confederation of British Industry (CBI) has estimated that 175 million working days were lost last year to sickness absence, at a cost to the economy of £13 billion.

But the good news is that most common health problems can be accommodated at work and these account for two-thirds of longer-term sickness absence, incapacity for work and ill-health retirement. So this is a problem that can be tackled.

Everyone has a role to play in taking a fresh look at the issues, potential solutions and who is best placed to help achieve them. Anyone with an interest in this area can help keep people healthy and in work:

Healthcare professionals:
Whether you are a GP, nurse, physiotherapist, occupational therapist or other healthcare professional, there are things you can do to promote people’s health and wellbeing.

Employers:
Whatever your industry, size of business or location, there are things you can do for the health and wellbeing of your employees.

Individuals:
It is not only employers and the health profession who can help. We all have a role to play.

Extracts taken from:
 Work and Well Being - www.workingforhealth.gov.uk
 

 

  The Coming of Age Partnership
© Coming of Age Partnership Site designed by Perceptis