A Competency Gap in Facilitating Psychologically Safe Workplaces
Exploring Workplace Mental Health Weekly Newsletter - Edition #100

A Competency Gap in Facilitating Psychologically Safe Workplaces

Many organizations are beginning to see the importance and value of facilitating psychologically safe workplaces. If your employer cares about psychological health and safety and workers’ mental health, they must know how to create a culture where all employees feel welcomed, have a sense of belonging and purpose, and feel safe to speak up without fear of retaliation or retribution.

The CSA Z1003 Psychological Health and Safety Standard promotes the north star for what employers can do to create psychologically healthy and safe workplaces by leveraging a Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA) approach. Both ISO 4503 Occupational Health And Safety Management — Psychological Health And Safety At Work — Guidelines For Managing Psychosocial Risks and U.S. Surgeon General Releases New Framework for Mental Health & Well-Being in the Workplace provide recommendations for employers.

Many employers wanting to adopt or adapt any of the Standard’s guidelines, ISO or Surgeon General recommendations need to be clear on how to proceed. Individuals who have been designated or volunteer typically facilitate workplace mental health. Many do not have credentials or formal educational backgrounds; they are self-taught. The risk is individuals making decisions without the knowledge and skills required to maximize the available budget and resources.

How prepared are your psychologically safe facilitators?

A Psychologically Safe Facilitator (PSF) can be an HR or OHS professional, union member, worker, leader from any level, an external subject matter expert, or consultant supporting the organization.

PSFs’ primary role is facilitating workplace mental health strategies, programs, policies, and initiatives that the employer supports to mitigate mental harm and promote mental health. They typically do this through implementing and facilitating programs and policies to offer resiliency training or support an EFAP.

Missing competency gap for creating psychologically safe workplaces

The level of knowledge and skills in those assigned to facilitate psychologically safe workplaces and mental health (i.e., PSFs) is a core competency gap in creating psychologically safe workplaces. Information on what employers can do is available. However, training and guidance are lacking. Work Safe Prevention Services (WSPS) of Ontario invested resources to create a framework to help PSFs to take proactive action to protect and promote workers’ mental health, regardless of their size, sector, budget, or resources.

One lesson observed in the development of the WSPS Roadmap over the past two years is the benefit of providing PSFs with knowledge and skills to develop their confidence and core competency in facilitating psychological safety.

This observation was strengthened upon reviewing the results of our recent CSA study that showed more employers are addressing workplace mental health with planning and doing. However, there are gaps in measuring or checking what is and is not working. This may be partially explained by a lack of awareness of the benefits of implementing a PDCA approach.

The workplace environment impacts employees’ experience and mental health. This suggests having PSFs trained and prepared to lead effectively and facilitate the resources available is good for business, protects workers, and helps them flourish.

How did they do?

Many PSFs have not been developed or trained and are unaware of what they do not know. Employers can use training, knowledge, and skills to help move their PSFs along a learning continuum. Employers and PSFs should seek training to help them mature and move psychological safety along as a profession through a credentialing process.

Through training and mentoring, PSFs can obtain the knowledge and skills to improve their ability to facilitate and move workplace mental health toward an evidence-based, continuous improvement versus a check-the-box approach.

Employers are encouraged to budget dollars for internal capacity building to help their PSFs obtain knowledge and skills to make evidence-based decisions. For workplace mental health to have an impact, employers must move from information sharing to habit creation, which is at the core of OHS management systems that promote ongoing learning, continuous improvement, and corrective action.


The Workplace Psychological Safety Assessment (WPSA) is not just another survey. This new tool that we have brought to market stems from 14+ years of research and provides both employees and employers with useful, meaningful data and resources to better support their journey towards psychological safety.For more information on the WPSA, send us an email at: info@howatthr.com


Cindy Hook

🦄 Recruiter / Hospitality / Retail / Staffing Solutions 🥷 / Mobile Home Parks / 💵 Passive Returns on 🚀 Auto-Pilot/Investor

6mo

Absolutely, Bill! Creating a culture where employees feel safe and valued is crucial. How do you suggest leaders start implementing these changes in a practical way?

Traci Johnson, RN CCM

Corporate Wellness Specialist| I help companies with 50+ employees recognize and combat workplace burnout, stress, and anxiety, increasing productivity and profit. Healthy Employees = Healthy Profits!

6mo

Great point!

Ian Lewis

Workplace mental health consultant and treating occupational therapist

6mo

Great point in "For workplace mental health to have an impact, employers must move from information sharing to habit creation" because we are looking for impact through behaviour change. The CSA National Standard does not address Psychological Safety Facilitators and I'll look up the work you referenced in Ontario.

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