UK businesses are failing to support older workers, research suggests

-

Companies across the UK are not monitoring the age demographic of their workforce and are potentially putting the wellbeing of their older employees at risk, according to esearch conducted by business insurance specialists QBE.

The research reveals that 60 percent of Senior HR decision makers did not know how many of their employees were over the state pension age. With this fewer than one in four were monitoring how their employee age demographic was going to change over the next 10-20 years. Over half (62 percent) of employers did not conduct age-relevant health and safety or risk management audits and 68 percent did not monitor the cause and/or rate of absence among older workers.

Rosie Hewitt, Rehabilitation Manager at QBE commented:

“This lack of awareness gives grounds for concern. From an employee health and wellbeing perspective, it could signal that Britain’s employers do not have the policies and support services in place that reflect the needs of all their workers. This exposes older employees to work-related injury or illness and companies to the financial consequences of employee absence”

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

The survey also addressed that among senior HR decision makers, more than half admitted that they did not know how many of their employees were at state pension age nor the number of employees that planned to continue working past this age.

In regards to the support offered to older workforces, over one in two respondents did not conduct specific health and safety or risk management audits. More than two thirds (72%) admitted to not assessing the suitability of existing occupational health and rehabilitation programmes within the company and 74 percent were not reviewing flexible working policies.

Amie Filcher is an editorial assistant at HRreview.

Latest news

Personalising the Benefits Experience: Why Employees Need More Than Just Information

This article explores how organisations can move beyond passive, one-size-fits-all communication to deliver relevant, timely, and simplified benefits experiences that reflect employee needs and life stages.

Grant Wyatt: When the love dies – when staying is riskier than quitting

When people fall out of love with their employer, or feel their employer has fallen out of love with them, what follows is rarely a clean exit.

£30bn pension savings window opens for employers ahead of 2029 reforms

UK employers could unlock billions in National Insurance savings by expanding pension salary sacrifice schemes before new limits take effect in 2029.

Expat jobs ‘fail early as costs hit $79,000 per worker’

International assignments are ending early due to family strain, isolation and poor preparation, as rising costs increase pressure on employers.
- Advertisement -

The Great Employer Divide: What the evidence shows about employers that back parents and carers — and those that don’t

Understand the growing divide between organisations that effectively support working parents and carers — and those that don’t. This session shows how to turn employee experience data into a clear business case, linking care-related pressures to performance, retention and workforce stability.

Scott Mills exit puts spotlight on risk of ‘news vacuum’ in high-profile dismissals

Sudden departure of a long-serving BBC presenter raises questions about how employers manage high-profile dismissals and limit speculation.

Must read

Corbyn’s reshuffle woes – Is internal argument constructive or damaging to a leader’s credibility?

Turbulent cabinet reshuffles, be they shadow or otherwise are not always a stroll in the park. Tony Blair, the New Labour St. Paul, famously botched a cabinet reshuffle in 2003.

Alicia Navarro: Email apnoea is destroying your productivity

Your heart rate and blood pressure increase, and your blood vessels constrict. Your digestive system gets subdued, while your pupils dilate as you switch into life-saving mode - all because you opened your email. Alicia Navarro says this doesn't have to be the case.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you