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Accounting firms urged to bolster mental health strategies

Business

The accounting industry must do more regarding mental health, with research indicating most firms are not well equipped to deal with the mental health of their employees, according to Beyondblue.

By Miranda Brownlee 10 minute read

Speaking to sister publication SMSF Adviser, Nick Arvanitis, Beyondblue's head of workplace research and resource development, said public accountants are generally going to be dealing with clients and the public, which can offset certain stressors.

“Generally speaking, consumers are becoming more empowered – we know that’s happening and it’s important for employers to recognise that is a potential stressor for individuals working in client-facing roles,” said Mr Arvanitis.

It is vital employers consider what measures they could introduce within the workplace to offset that stressor because it is not something that’s going to change, he added.

“Part of that is making sure that if there are things an accountant is struggling with, they’re aware of the [varied] support that is available to them,” he said.

“It’s also doing things like providing a bit more flexibility. In terms of working hours, it might be that as an employer you say, ‘If you've had a demanding interaction with a client, I'm very happy for you to take five or 10 minutes to go for a walk or chat to a colleague, just to reflect on the scenario’.”

Mr Arvanitis said that based on a 2011 Annual Business and Professions Study, accountants scored below the average in the rating they gave for how well equipped the organisations they worked for were in dealing with mental health in the workplace.

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Accounting organisations scored 2.4, while the average was 2.6, based on the findings of the study.

Accountants were also least likely to have undertaken training in dealing with mental illness in the workplace at 11.3 per cent, compared with the sample average of 17.5 per cent.

“These are indicators that perhaps, relatively speaking, there’s not the confidence or the skills to be able to manage a lot of these workplace mental health issues in the accountancy profession,” said Mr Arvanitis.

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