
Psychiatr News March 7, 2008
Volume 43, Number 5, page 13
© 2008 American Psychiatric Association
Michigan Psychiatrist Teaches Company About Depression
Sandra Hass Yamhure
Sandra Hass-Yamhure is a consultant to APA's Office of Healthcare Systems
and Financing and executive editor of Mental HealthWorks.
An important part of a workshop on workplace depression is teaching
supervisors how to confront employees suspected of being depressed so that
they can get the help they need.
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan (BCBSM) may be the only company in the
United States that requires all its leaders—vice presidents, directors,
managers, supervisors, and team leaders—to attend a workshop on
depression awareness. APA member Beth Goldman, M.D., M.P.H., an employee of
BCBSM, has been at the center of developing and conducting the company's
depression awareness workshops, and she talked to Psychiatric News
about her experience.
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Beth Goldman, M.D., M.P.H. (left), guides Blue Cross Blue Shield of
Michigan leaders through role-playing exercises during the company's
Depression Awareness Workshop.
Credit: Sandra Hass Yamhure
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"If you like to teach," said Goldman, "conducting this
sort of workshop in a business environment is rewarding and fun. People are
hungry for up-to-date, accurate information about mental illness and its
treatments."
Because companies increasingly recognize the need to address mental health
at the workplace, according to Clare Miller, director of APA's Partnership for
Workplace Mental Health, she hopes Goldman's experience encourages others to
work with the business community.
Winning Management's Support
BCBSM's Depression Awareness Workshops evolved over several years. About
eight years ago the company's board of directors identified mental health as
part of its "social mission," which is intended to improve the
health status of all Michigan residents. Goldman was invited to join others in
developing the activities for the company's mental health social mission,
which focused on depression because of its prevalence in the workplace. Some
of the social-mission activities included a depression tool kit, which was
sent to about 7,000 primary care physicians; public service announcements;
grants to schools and senior residential and activity facilities to develop
depression awareness and screening programs; and lunchtime information
sessions for employees.
The lunchtime sessions were so well received that Goldman and others
suggested holding sessions for the company's leaders. It took about a year to
write an instructor's manual, compile the participants' workbook, and hold
pilot workshops. Armed with that experience and a strong business case, they
convinced the board to support the half-day workshops.
For their proposal, Goldman and her colleagues collected data on the costs,
especially the business-related costs, of major depression nationwide and its
cost to BCBSM specifically. They noted that although only 10 percent of people
may suffer from some form of depression at any one time, its impact may be 100
percent on the professional relationships around that individual.
"The business case was essential," Goldman said, "and it
was then that we realized we'd have to convince workshop participants as well,
so we ended up including the cost data in the workshop."
Role Playing Key to Workshop Success
So far, 355 BCBSM leaders (excluding those who were involved in the pilot
course) have participated in the workshops. The workshops are given on a
regular basis throughout the year and open to the first 20 to 25 individuals
who register. At each workshop, facilitators cover stigma, the clinical
picture, intervention techniques, and services available through the employee
assistance program (EAP).
Although participants come from a wide variety of occupations in the
company, Goldman finds their knowledge of depression fairly sophisticated.
They normally pepper her with detailed clinical questions, emphasizing the
need for a psychiatrist's expertise in the room.
"The real need of participants, though, is learning how to intervene
effectively with an employee who may be depressed," she said.
Facilitators carefully walk attendees through the steps of supporting and
confronting an employee, but it isn't until attendees are led through a series
of role-playing exercises that they realize how much practice it takes to
handle such a situation
effectively.
"Most supervisors don't realize how difficult it is to confront an
employee effectively until they try it," Goldman explained. "If
people don't try it, they won't have the confidence necessary to make
intervention work."
Nearly all participants have given the workshops an "excellent"
rating. Furthermore, since the workshops began, employee use of EAP services
at BCBSM has doubled. Goldman noted, however, that the necessity for making
the business case never goes away. She summed up her experience this way.
"Working with corporations is never a static situation, which makes
it always interesting and a challenge. The economic picture changes, the
social climate changes, and businesses respond in various ways. When you're
training business leaders, you're on the front line, and my experience tells
me that psychiatry has something important to offer."
Information about the BCBSM Depression Awareness Workshops is
available from Beth Goldman, M.D., M.P.H., at
bgoldman{at}bcbsm.com
or (248) 448-6145.
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