With one in five Canadians expected to suffer a mental health disorder in his or her lifetime, it is likely that one or more of your co-workers is in recovery. What is it like? Gaining a deeper understanding of recovery is essential when welcoming an employee back to the workplace after a mental health leave.

What is recovery?

The Canadian Mental Health Association defines recovery as:

The personal process that people with mental health conditions experience in gaining control, meaning and purpose in their lives. Recovery involves different things for different people. For some, recovery means the complete absence of the symptoms of mental illness. For others, recovery means living a full life in the community while learning to live with ongoing symptoms.


Tips to help someone in recovery at work

It’s not unusual for even the brightest of the bright to suffer from a mental health condition. Whether overcoming a bout with depression, emotional distress, post-traumatic stress disorder, or any other mental health condition, people in recovery often struggle to rediscover themselves and fit in. If you know someone at work who is in recovery, it’s tempting to pretend that nothing happened and everything is back to normal. Meanwhile, that person is facing a battle of a lifetime; it’s terrifying; it’s exhausting; and it makes others uncomfortable.

You can help by: