With the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Outbreak impacting the lives of millions of employees, including many who are not equipped to work from home for long periods of time, employers are burdened with ensuring that the health and safety of employees is being addressed in their new environments. Australians are being urged to work from home, in an effort to help limit the transmission of the disease. However, it’s the implication that comes with people working from home that are causing employers headaches, especially when they are not fully aware of their safety obligations.
What is being described as a once in a generation event, will continue to change the way we live our lives for the foreseeable future – at least the next six months according to many reports. As people switch to completing their work from a home environment, organisations must take extra care to fulfil their employee safety obligations, including to their mental health and wellbeing.
Businesses are faced with compliance issues which require them to monitor their employees’ wellbeing and focus on the health and safety of the workers, even when they are working remotely and from home. The onus on employers to ensure the safety and wellbeing of their employees that are now being forced to work from home is a logistical nightmare. Many companies are unaware of just how closely they are required to monitor their employees’ situation.
Model Workplace Health and Safety laws apply to businesses when employees must operate somewhere besides their usual workplace. There is a sense that operating from home takes the responsibility away from employers, but this is incorrect. The inability of businesses to physically assess the working environment of employees means appropriate measures must be put in place.
Issues employers must consider include workstation set up and psychosocial risks. Psychosocial risks may include isolation, a diminished support network, fatigue, online harassment and domestic violence.
Working isolated at home is known to have substantial effects on mental wellbeing for many. Removal from the support networks that exist in typical working environments means that people are often less equipped to deal with personal issues. Loneliness and the inability to switch off from work are especially prevalent mental consequences for people working from home.
SafetyIQ Risk Assessments enable an employee to create a daily check-in process, log their home/work location and complete a risk assessment of their environment. Employers can access SafetyIQ and immediately see if their employees have checked-in safely. Risk assessments are completed in two minutes and provide a sense of security to employers – knowing that employees are safe; and for employees – knowing that their organisation is still checking in on their wellbeing. The consistent contact facilitated by SafetyIQ ensures that employers can be systematic in assessing their employees’ wellbeing. There is a fine line between invested care and remote micro-management, so organisations must strike a balance.
Daily check-ins are essential to the assessment of employee’s mental wellbeing. The ease of check-ins with SafetyIQ Risk Assessments is a key benefit – so much so it completely optimises the safety and wellbeing monitoring process.
Check out our Human and Organisational Performance Guide that illustrates how to create a flexible and productive workplace environments, even for remote workers.
SafeWork Australia’s recommendations for businesses whose employees work from home strongly endorse the use of risk assessments and regular check-ins. Specifically, it advocates:
Australia is going through changes that have never been experienced before. The shift from working on-site to at-home has significant effects on both the employee and the business, and navigating this transition is critical.
Businesses are encouraged to implement measures such as frequent communication and risk assessments during this time to ensure the wellbeing of their workers. SafetyIQ Risk Assessment streamlines this process by allowing remote workers to complete daily check-ins assessing the risk of their environment. For more information, please visit our website.
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