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Identifiers
Sick on the Job?
The costs of mental ill-health for the individuals concerned, employers and society at large are enormous. Mental illness is responsible for a very significant loss of potential labour supply, high rates of unemployment, and a high incidence of sickness absence and reduced productivity at work. In particular, mental illness causes too many young people to leave the labour market, or never really enter it, through early moves onto disability benefit. Today, between one-third and one-half of all new disability benefit claims are for reasons of mental ill-health, and among young adults that proportion goes up to over 70%. Indeed, mental ill-health is becoming a key issue for the well-functioning of OECD’s labour markets and social policies and requires a stronger focus on policies addressing mental health and work issues. Despite the very high costs to the individuals and the economy, there is only little awareness about the connection between mental health and work, and the drivers behind the labour market...
Topics in this document
Psychology
Mental disorder
Health
Mental health
Disability
Disease
Employment
Occupational safety and health
Major depressive disorder
Intellectual disability
Health care
Psychiatry
Productivity
Social stigma
Welfare
Labour economics
Anxiety disorder
Chronic condition
Occupational stress
Poverty
Health system
Comorbidity
Unemployment
Health sciences
Recession
Somatic symptom disorder
Behavioural sciences
Mental distress
Education
Branches of science
Related SDGs
SDG 3: Good Health and Well-being ...
SDG 3: Good Health and Well-being
Target 3.4
Reduce by one third premature mortality from non-communicable diseases through prevention and treatment and promote mental health and well-being
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Citations
Cited by 238
other policy documents
(150 of them are from other policy sources)