I’m Suffering from Depression and Anxiety – How Do I Tell My Boss?

Anxiety and depression are the most common mental health conditions in the UK; 1 in 3 people will experience symptoms during their lifetime. During Mental Health Awareness Week, a top Priory psychiatrist talks employees through 10 important tips – and reminds employers to make mental health their business…

In today’s economic climate, many can be forgiven for feeling ‘grateful’ to have a job and therefore all too easily the added pressures of working life get accepted rather than questioned. Many may even consider it a weakness to suggest they are unable to cope.

But mental health has risen up the workplace agenda – and it starts by having a conversation with your boss. Research by Business in the Community found the majority (84 per cent) of managers acknowledged that employee wellbeing was their responsibility.

Yet a new study, released this week by The Institution of Occupational Safety and Health (IOSH), shows that most workers feel that there is still a stigma attached to mental health. 

The study reports that only 1 in 10 would feel comfortable to discuss their mental health with their employer.

More than 11 million days a year are lost at work because of stress, and employers have a legal duty to protect employees from stress at work by doing a risk assessment and acting on it. After all, stress, anxiety and depression may result in significant mental health problems when experienced over a long time.  

Dr Paul McLaren, consultant psychiatrist at Priory’s Hayes Grove Hospital in Kent and at Priory’s high street Wellbeing Centres in Harley Street and Fenchurch Street, central London, talks us through how best to raise the issues. He tells YCB about the several approaches employees can take:

1.Remember a mental health problem is no different to reporting a problem with your physical health…it just feels different.  

When we are depressed, we often have strong feelings of shame about how we are feeling.

That is not just a psychological reaction but part of the biology of depression. Shame leads us to hiding away but hiding away makes our situation worse in the workplace and elsewhere. Think about the origins of how you are feeling.

2. If you can’t find the words to explain how you feel, or the help you may need from your employer, write it down first in an email or letter… Check it and run it past someone close.

3. Rather than making it about how you “feel”, focus on the impact your mental health is having on your work and productivity – and how you can work together to improve the situation. Remember, your employer will want to help you not least because it makes good business sense.

4. It’s entirely up to you how much you want to disclose.

You don’t have to “name” your condition but be careful about words like “stress” which can mean many different things and is often misinterpreted. If you have seen your doctor, and have a diagnosis, then let your employer know you are ill.

5. Don’t sweat about the so-called stigma.

Stigma and discrimination about mental health is “not allowed” to exist in the workplace in 2018. Most responsible employers recognise that and many take positive steps to reduce it through educating their workforce about mental as well as physical well-being.

6. If you really feel you can’t face talking to your boss, seek help in the form of a mediator.

You don’t have to do this alone if you don’t want to. Help and support can often be found in your HR department, through a trusted colleague, via an occupational health officer or a representative from ACAS.

7. Face your fear and recognise that your boss may be more receptive than you think.

These days mental ill health is the commonest reason for sickness absence. Between one in five and one in six people will seek help for depression at some time so the chances are that someone in your office or management team will have direct experience of it either through having suffered themselves or being close to someone who did.

8. Check out what is on offer at work.

Companies both large and small across the UK invest in their employee wellbeing and want to provide support to their employees. This might include free phone counselling and short-term face-to-face counselling (typically 6-8 sessions). Care First, part of the Priory Group, operates an Employee Assistance Programme (EAP) for many UK employers consisting of a 24/7 telephone counselling helpline, face-to-face counselling and a range of services such as CBT (Cognitive Behavioural Therapy) programmes, and an online health and wellbeing programme and an ‘EAP in Your Pocket’, which is an app giving employees access to tools for stress and anxiety. Users track their mood over time and receive help to maximise their coping mechanisms. Check whether your employer offers this too, as it is free for employees and hugely valuable.

9. Don’t forget to let them know how they did.

When you have weathered the storm and recovered, let your employer know how they did. What was helpful for you when you were struggling? Help your organisation to learn from your experience.

10. By speaking up, you are helping yourself and others.

As a valued employee, with knowledge and experience, your firm has invested time and training in you and want you to be productive. When we get depressed we lose sight of that. By speaking up, you are helping yourself – and them.

Charlotte Giver

Charlotte is the founder and editor-in-chief at Your Coffee Break magazine. She studied English Literature at Fairfield University in Connecticut whilst taking evening classes in journalism at MediaBistro in NYC. She then pursued a BA degree in Public Relations at Bournemouth University in the UK. With a background working in the PR industry in Los Angeles, Barcelona and London, Charlotte then moved on to launching Your Coffee Break from the YCB HQ in London’s Covent Garden and has been running the online magazine for the past 10 years. She is a mother, an avid reader, runner and puts a bit too much effort into perfecting her morning brew.