CIPD unveils guide on employer’s health and safety responsibilities

-

The CIPD has unveild a new guide highlighting the potential legal risks employers face if they ignore their health and safety responsibilities in regards to workplace stress.

The guide outlines what employers are legally obliged to do in regards to identifying and  preventing stress at work and is throurogly supported by  Health and Safety Executive (HSE), Acas and the cross-government Health.
The guide, Work-related Stress: What the Law Says, which was written by John Hamilton, head of safety, health and wellbeing at Leeds Metropolitan University, also highlights recent cases where employers have faced significant compensation payouts for failing to identify and prevent stress in the proper manner.

In addition, it provides advice on how employers can tackle stress through good people management.

Dame Carol Black, national director for health and work, said: “It is in employers’ interests to manage stress at work proactively and not just assume all staff are coping, particularly in a tough economic environment where many employees are under pressure to do more with less.”

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 CIPD’s quarterly July 2010 Employee Outlook survey showed almost half (49%) of staff have noticed an increase in stress at work, which they feel is  a result of the economic downturn.

Ben Willmott, senior public policy adviser, CIPD, added: “Employers that fail to manage stress effectively risk losing key staff through high absence levels and employee turnover. They will also suffer from low staff morale and risk higher levels of conflict and accidents in the workplace. In addition, they potentially face costly personal injury claims, as well as damage to their employer brand.”



Latest news

Amy Speake: Why a cooling job market is the worst time to hire a leader

A slowing labour market should be a hiring manager's dream. But anyone trying to recruit a leader capable of driving real commercial growth will tell you otherwise.

Bezos joins growing pushback against AI jobs apocalypse claims

Tech leaders are increasingly questioning predictions of mass workforce disruption, arguing new tools could expand opportunities and ease skills shortages.

Workers say staying in the wrong job is their biggest career mistake

Nearly four in five workers have career regrets, with staying too long in the wrong role and working excessive hours among the most common concerns.

Unemployment falls as private sector pay growth slows to 2.9%

Official figures show unemployment edged lower but vacancies, payroll employment and private sector wage growth continued to weaken.
- Advertisement -

Building trust through growth, change and uncertainty

An HR director reflects on culture, communication and leadership during a period of major business transformation and growth.

Performance reviews leave many workers feeling ‘less positive’

More than a third of employees say they felt less positive about their role after their last performance review, raising concerns about engagement and retention.

Must read

Taking the fear out of employee assessments

Given the fragile economic outlook, the goal of most...

Andrew Harvey: HR & Comms, where’s the line?

Andrew Harvey discusses how HR can collaborate with its PR teams to ensure better communication with its employees and help to improve employee engagement within the company.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you