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Only 2/5 employers offer physical health support following injury, illness or disability

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Two in five (40%) employers offer their staff support for physical health to help them stay in or return to work, if they are injured or have a new illness or disability, finds GRiD, the industry body for the group risk sector.

This physical support includes access to private treatment, vocational rehab or other similar medical services.

In the event of an injury or new illness/disability, employers also offer the following:

Katharine Moxham, spokesperson for GRiD, said:

While it is good to see employers thinking broadly about their staff in these situations across the four main pillars of physical, mental, social and financial support, these figures are low. We would like to see more employers prepared to support their workforce through these difficult times.

Katharine Moxham, spokesperson for GRiD

Support for physical health is most helpful

Of those employers who provide support when staff are incapacitated, a third (33%) said that they felt the support for physical health was the most helpful. This was followed by support for mental health (31%) and financial health (29%).

Funding for support

When a staff member has an injury or new illness/disability, 41% of employers fund this support on a case-by-case basis. GRiD warns that this approach has several drawbacks:

Employers who offer benefits such as group income protection will find that they are well-equipped to deal with staff in these situations which is the most cost-effective and comprehensive way to fund this.

Katharine Moxham continued:

We would encourage more employers to investigate how group income protection has helped other companies and how it could support theirs. It does of course give financial assurance but also a great deal of preventative and rehabilitation support too.

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