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Fitter Minds, Fitter Jobs

From Awareness to Change in Integrated Mental Health, Skills and Work Policies

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A series of reviews of mental health and work policies in selected OECD countries revealed the challenge of mental health for social and labour market outcomes and policies and the high costs of the continued stigmatisation of mental health for individuals, employers and societies. To better respond to this challenge, in early 2016 health and employment ministers from the 38 OECD countries endorsed a Recommendation of the Council on Integrated Mental Health, Skills, and Work Policy. The Recommendation asked for a holistic mental-health-in-all-policies approach, with particular attention to a timely and integrated delivery of services and the involvement of frontline actors.

Five years later, it is time to assess progress achieved in the policy areas covered by the Recommendation (health policy, youth policy, workplace policy, and welfare policy). This report complements a legal document prepared by the OECD on the implementation of the Recommendation five years after its adoption, and adds quantitative evidence to it as well as considerations about the implications of the experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic on future versions of the Recommendation. Policy is in flux in most countries but much more will have to be done to implement the principles and fulfil the promises of the Recommendation.

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What are the implications and lessons of the COVID‑19 pandemic for integrated mental health, skills and work policy?

This chapter summarises the latest findings on the impact of the COVID‑19 crisis on mental health and the corresponding implications for an integrated policy approach. It considers how the mental health impact has varied over time and across groups of the population, with a focus on young people who are among those most affected by the pandemic. The chapter also looks at policy responses that countries have put into place to address disruptions to education and disruptions to work (through widespread teleworking and use of short-time work schemes). Finally, it identifies emerging priorities such as improving data collection, assessing levels of stigma, addressing the impact of the digital transformation, and understanding the challenges of rising loneliness, and discusses how these priorities could affect the implementation of integrated mental health, skills, and work policies.

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