Hassard Juliet, Dulal-Arthur Teixiera, Bourke Jane, Wishart Maria, Roper Stephen, Belt Vicki, Leka Stavroula, Pahl Nick, Bartle Craig, Thomson Louise, Blake Holly
Queen's Business School, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom.
School of Medicine, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2024 Jul 17;19(7):e0306065. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0306065. eCollection 2024.
Line manager (LM) training in mental health is gaining recognition as an effective method for improving the mental health and wellbeing of workers. However, research predominantly focuses on the impacts of training at the employee-level, often neglecting the broader organisational-level outcomes. Most studies derive insights from LMs using self-reported data, with very few studies examining impacts on organisational-level outcomes.
To explore the relationship between LM training in mental health and organisational-level outcomes using company-level data from a diverse range of organisations.
This study is a secondary analysis of anonymised panel survey data from firms in England, with data derived from computer-assisted telephone surveys over four waves (2020, 1899 firms; 2021, 1551; 2022, 1904; and 2023, 1902). The analysis merged the four datasets to control for temporal variations. Probit regression was conducted including controls for age of organisation, sector, size, and wave to isolate specific relationships of interest.
We found that LM training in mental health is significantly associated with several organisational-level outcomes, including: improved staff recruitment (β = .317, p < .001) and retention (β = .453, p < .001), customer service (β = .453, p < .001), business performance (β = .349, p < .001), and lower long-term sickness absence due to mental ill-health (β = -.132, p < .05).
This is the first study to explore the organisational-level outcomes of LM training in mental health in a large sample of organisations of different types, sizes, and sectors. Training LM in mental health is directly related to diverse aspects of an organisations' functioning and, therefore, has strategic business value for organisations. This knowledge has international relevance for policy and practice in workforce health and business performance.
心理健康方面的一线经理培训作为改善员工心理健康和福祉的有效方法正日益受到认可。然而,研究主要集中在培训对员工层面的影响,往往忽视了更广泛的组织层面的成果。大多数研究从一线经理那里获取自我报告数据以得出见解,很少有研究考察对组织层面成果的影响。
利用来自不同类型组织的公司层面数据,探讨心理健康方面的一线经理培训与组织层面成果之间的关系。
本研究是对英格兰公司匿名面板调查数据的二次分析,数据来自四轮计算机辅助电话调查(2020年,1899家公司;2021年,1551家;2022年,1904家;2023年,1902家)。分析合并了这四个数据集以控制时间变化。进行了概率回归分析,包括对组织年龄、行业、规模和轮次的控制,以分离出感兴趣的特定关系。
我们发现,心理健康方面的一线经理培训与几个组织层面的成果显著相关,包括:员工招聘改善(β = 0.317,p < 0.001)、留用率提高(β = 0.453,p < 0.001)、客户服务改善(β = 0.453,p < 0.001)、业务绩效提升(β = 0.349,p < 0.001)以及因心理健康问题导致的长期病假减少(β = -0.132,p < 0.05)。
这是第一项在不同类型、规模和行业的大量组织样本中探索心理健康方面一线经理培训的组织层面成果的研究。对一线经理进行心理健康培训与组织运作的多个方面直接相关,因此对组织具有战略商业价值。这一知识对劳动力健康和商业绩效方面的政策与实践具有国际相关性。