Prioritising mental health at work : Prioritising mental health at work
/ Prevention resources and tools / Working lives
How one workplace moved from awareness to action on mental health and, over time, began to see real progress and results.
/ Prevention resources and tools / Working lives
How one workplace moved from awareness to action on mental health and, over time, began to see real progress and results.
As the Scottish Government prepares a new Mental Health and Wellbeing Strategy, we have a fresh opportunity to protect our nation’s mental health and well-being in the context of these national challenges and to draft a truly whole-of-government Strategy.
How one partnership working model has made researchers think again.
We are calling on government, councils and the NHS to use our new suicide risk map to support mentally healthier communities.
This year marks 70 years since the creation of the Mental Health Foundation. When the Foundation was initially started it was known as the Mental Health Research Fund and though it has changed in many ways over the years, mental health research is still at the core of what we do today.
Political uncertainty can be challenging, regardless of our beliefs or where we might fall on the political spectrum.
We know that most mental health problems develop by the age of 24. This means that our mental health can be particularly vulnerable during university. Suicides among university students are of particular concern.
Piers Morgan has criticised Mental Health Foundation research in a tweet. Mark Rowland of the Mental Health Foundation responds.