Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > National Policy Index (NPI) for worker mental h...

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

National Policy Index (NPI) for worker mental health and its relationship with enterprise psychosocial safety climate

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

National Policy Index (NPI) for worker mental health and its relationship with enterprise psychosocial safety climate. / Potter, R.E.; Dollard, M.; Lerouge, L. et al.
In: Safety Science, Vol. 172, 106428, 30.04.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Potter, R. E., Dollard, M., Lerouge, L., Jain, A., Leka, S., & Cefaliello, A. (2024). National Policy Index (NPI) for worker mental health and its relationship with enterprise psychosocial safety climate. Safety Science, 172, Article 106428. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssci.2024.106428

Vancouver

Potter RE, Dollard M, Lerouge L, Jain A, Leka S, Cefaliello A. National Policy Index (NPI) for worker mental health and its relationship with enterprise psychosocial safety climate. Safety Science. 2024 Apr 30;172:106428. Epub 2024 Jan 24. doi: 10.1016/j.ssci.2024.106428

Author

Potter, R.E. ; Dollard, M. ; Lerouge, L. et al. / National Policy Index (NPI) for worker mental health and its relationship with enterprise psychosocial safety climate. In: Safety Science. 2024 ; Vol. 172.

Bibtex

@article{a88f0eb6a665441c9da1116c1f1c0286,
title = "National Policy Index (NPI) for worker mental health and its relationship with enterprise psychosocial safety climate",
abstract = "National occupational health and safety (OHS) policy (e.g., legislation) underpins worker health protection and is imperative for healthy and safe working populations. In the interest of bolstering mental health through decent work, this study undertakes a global analysis of OHS policy for worker mental health and develops and validates a short tool quantifying national policy approaches—the National Policy Index (NPI, for worker mental health). Data were collected across 45 countries from 164 global experts (and/or expert groups) to capture policy presence, priority action areas, and drivers and barriers surrounding policy implementation. Analysis revealed top global psychosocial concerns are harassment, mobbing or bullying, work overload, discrimination, and poor work-life balance. Policy priorities are harassment, mobbing or bullying, discrimination, and physical violence. The psychosocial hazards/risks that are most addressed in policies or regulated are physical violence, discrimination, harassment, mobbing or bullying. The main driver for managing hazards is workplace senior management support and having specific national regulations, and the main barrier is poor resource availability. Further, the NPI was developed through exploratory factor analysis and validated through significant correlation with a national policy audit and to the 2019 European Survey of Enterprises on New and Emerging Risks data, which reports enterprise level psychosocial safety climate (PSC, organisational policies, practices, and procedures for stress prevention). The correlation between the NPI and enterprise-level PSC highlights the critical role of national policy in protecting worker population mental health. Yet above and beyond national policy, national union density also related to enterprise PSC indicating that social action is also imperative. Findings suggest that global mental health can be reinforced via decent work outlined in national policy approaches, particularly legislation, as well as via senior management support, and collective approaches such as union action.",
keywords = "Mental health, National policy, Psychosocial safety climate, International review",
author = "R.E. Potter and M. Dollard and L. Lerouge and A. Jain and S. Leka and A. Cefaliello",
year = "2024",
month = apr,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1016/j.ssci.2024.106428",
language = "English",
volume = "172",
journal = "Safety Science",
issn = "0925-7535",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - National Policy Index (NPI) for worker mental health and its relationship with enterprise psychosocial safety climate

AU - Potter, R.E.

AU - Dollard, M.

AU - Lerouge, L.

AU - Jain, A.

AU - Leka, S.

AU - Cefaliello, A.

PY - 2024/4/30

Y1 - 2024/4/30

N2 - National occupational health and safety (OHS) policy (e.g., legislation) underpins worker health protection and is imperative for healthy and safe working populations. In the interest of bolstering mental health through decent work, this study undertakes a global analysis of OHS policy for worker mental health and develops and validates a short tool quantifying national policy approaches—the National Policy Index (NPI, for worker mental health). Data were collected across 45 countries from 164 global experts (and/or expert groups) to capture policy presence, priority action areas, and drivers and barriers surrounding policy implementation. Analysis revealed top global psychosocial concerns are harassment, mobbing or bullying, work overload, discrimination, and poor work-life balance. Policy priorities are harassment, mobbing or bullying, discrimination, and physical violence. The psychosocial hazards/risks that are most addressed in policies or regulated are physical violence, discrimination, harassment, mobbing or bullying. The main driver for managing hazards is workplace senior management support and having specific national regulations, and the main barrier is poor resource availability. Further, the NPI was developed through exploratory factor analysis and validated through significant correlation with a national policy audit and to the 2019 European Survey of Enterprises on New and Emerging Risks data, which reports enterprise level psychosocial safety climate (PSC, organisational policies, practices, and procedures for stress prevention). The correlation between the NPI and enterprise-level PSC highlights the critical role of national policy in protecting worker population mental health. Yet above and beyond national policy, national union density also related to enterprise PSC indicating that social action is also imperative. Findings suggest that global mental health can be reinforced via decent work outlined in national policy approaches, particularly legislation, as well as via senior management support, and collective approaches such as union action.

AB - National occupational health and safety (OHS) policy (e.g., legislation) underpins worker health protection and is imperative for healthy and safe working populations. In the interest of bolstering mental health through decent work, this study undertakes a global analysis of OHS policy for worker mental health and develops and validates a short tool quantifying national policy approaches—the National Policy Index (NPI, for worker mental health). Data were collected across 45 countries from 164 global experts (and/or expert groups) to capture policy presence, priority action areas, and drivers and barriers surrounding policy implementation. Analysis revealed top global psychosocial concerns are harassment, mobbing or bullying, work overload, discrimination, and poor work-life balance. Policy priorities are harassment, mobbing or bullying, discrimination, and physical violence. The psychosocial hazards/risks that are most addressed in policies or regulated are physical violence, discrimination, harassment, mobbing or bullying. The main driver for managing hazards is workplace senior management support and having specific national regulations, and the main barrier is poor resource availability. Further, the NPI was developed through exploratory factor analysis and validated through significant correlation with a national policy audit and to the 2019 European Survey of Enterprises on New and Emerging Risks data, which reports enterprise level psychosocial safety climate (PSC, organisational policies, practices, and procedures for stress prevention). The correlation between the NPI and enterprise-level PSC highlights the critical role of national policy in protecting worker population mental health. Yet above and beyond national policy, national union density also related to enterprise PSC indicating that social action is also imperative. Findings suggest that global mental health can be reinforced via decent work outlined in national policy approaches, particularly legislation, as well as via senior management support, and collective approaches such as union action.

KW - Mental health

KW - National policy

KW - Psychosocial safety climate

KW - International review

U2 - 10.1016/j.ssci.2024.106428

DO - 10.1016/j.ssci.2024.106428

M3 - Journal article

VL - 172

JO - Safety Science

JF - Safety Science

SN - 0925-7535

M1 - 106428

ER -