Mental health and employment

Job well done: Employment and mental health problems, a guide for funders

Benedict Rickey, Iona Joy & Esther Paterson

February 2012, 25 pages

Job well doneMental health is key to everyone’s well-being. It affects our relationships, our work and our overall happiness. But at any one time, one in six people are suffering from mental health problems. This costs society £67bn every year—as much as the government has recently spent bailing out UK banks.

The economic cost of mental health problems is mainly down to unemployment, sick leave and poor performance at work. Job well done is a guide for funders keen to reduce these huge costs and improve lives. It identifies effective charities and approaches helping people with mental health problems get back to work, at a time when soaring unemployment and tighter public spending mean private funding is needed more than ever.

Private funding can improve the lives of people with mental health problems by helping them find jobs and make the most of their work. But there is also a part to play for social investors, businesses, and charities. This is a challenging and complex area, but there is very real potential to help thousands of people with mental health problems to lead healthy and productive lives.

In 2011, Barclays Wealth commissioned NPC to identify the UK's costliest social problems, and the most effective charitable interventions to address them. As a result, we published Early interventions: An economic approach to charitable giving, identifying the three most costly issues in the UK: chaotic families, children with conduct disorders and mental health and employment. Job well done gives funders more detail on the third issue, and we will publish reports on chaotic families and children with conduct disorders later this year.

We are grateful to Barclays Wealth for supporting the original research that provides the basis for this report.

 

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Charity insight

"Only a quarter of people with long-term mental health problems are in work.''