The Mineral Products Association (MPA) has published ‘Managing Work-Related Stress…A Guide to Risk Assessment’ which aims to provide Clear, Simple, Smart guidance to employers and managers to help them complete a suitable and sufficient work-related stress risk assessment of their workplace.
Statistics published by Health and Safety Executive show that 0.9m workers suffered from work-related stress, depression or anxiety in 2022/23, accounting for 17.1 million working days lost1. Deloitte also reported that poor mental health, including stress, costs UK employers up to £56 billion a year2.
As well as a duty of care and a moral obligation, conducting a work-related stress risk assessment is a legal requirement and HSE inspectors are increasingly asking businesses what they are doing to comply with the law to minimize the risks of work-related stress.
Launched to coincide with Stress Awareness Month, this MPA guidance document describes the importance of carrying out an organisational level risk assessment that addresses work related stress. It also lays out the legal context and touches on the moral and financial cases for managing work related stress and the practical steps that need to be taken during the risk assessment process.
The guidance is based on HSE’s ‘Stress Management Standards’ and includes templates and suggestions of control measures that organisations can adopt or adapt to manage work related stress in each of the six main stressors identified in the ‘Management Standards’; Demands, Change, Control, Relationships, Role and Support. The guidance should enable organisations to follow the steps necessary to produce a suitable and sufficient risk assessment as well as an action plan of how control measures will be implemented. The main target audience is Health and Safety professionals and managers who may be required to carry out an organisational level risk assessment.
Colin Mew, MPA Head of Health and Safety said: “Risk assessment provides employers with a logical means to identify hazards, assess the likelihood of harm and implement and track effectiveness of control measures. In most cases, employers will need to record the findings of the risk assessment. A ‘suitable and sufficient’ risk assessment is a legal requirement and is fundamental to demonstrating compliance with the law.
Many organisations will already have implemented many effective control measures to tackle work related stress and improve general well-being at work and it will be a relatively simple matter using the templates in the guidance to organise all of that work in the form of a suitable and sufficient risk assessment. Other employers may be starting from earlier in the process and will find numerous real-life examples of control measures from across the mineral products sector that they can adapt or adopt for their own unique circumstances.”
Lisa Saunders, Chair, MPA Mental Health and Well-being Working Group said, “Managing work related ill health, including mental health is a moral duty, a legal duty and just makes good business sense. The MPA Working Group is made up of experts who lead on this topic for their respective employers and represent a wide range of organisations from SMEs to global companies.
The guidance launched today addresses a significant issue that all employers face head on and aims to give them ‘Clear, Simple, Smart’ guidance on the risk assessment process. No matter what point organisations have reached in terms of identifying and managing work-related stress, this guidance will be useful. By following this guidance and the using the templates, links and references, employers will be well equipped to manage work-related stress and improve the health of their workforce”.
The guidance can be accessed and downloaded from Safequarry.com here
1 Data taken from HSE “Health and Safety at Work summary statistics for GB 2023”
2 Deloitte “Mental Health and Employers. The Case for Investment – Pandemic and Beyond, March 2022”
Ends
About the Mineral Products Association:
The Mineral Products Association (MPA) is the trade association for the aggregates, asphalt, cement, concrete, dimension stone, lime, mortar and industrial sand industries. MPA is the sectoral voice for mineral products, covering 100% of UK cement and lime production, 90% of GB aggregates production, 95% of asphalt and over 60% of ready-mixed concrete and precast concrete production. In 2021, the industry supplied £22 billion worth of materials and services to the Economy. It is also the largest supplier to the construction industry, which had annual output valued at £178 billion. Industry production represents the largest flow of materials in the UK economy and is also one of the largest manufacturing sectors.
Stress Awareness Month 2025 is an annual event observed every April since 1992, dedicated to increasing public awareness about the causes and cures of stress. For more information visit
https://www.stress.org.uk/stress-awareness-month-2025/
For further information
Contact Robert McIlveen: Robert.McIlveen@mineralproducts.org