86% of employees in India's corporate sector are struggling with mental health issues, according to the 2025 Corporate Wellness Index reported by The Federal. That number changes the conversation. Workplace mental health isn't a side topic for HR. It's part of how people work, lead, cope, recover, and stay connected to their teams.
For new managers, this can feel intimidating. You may worry about saying the wrong thing, crossing a line, or taking on a problem you're not trained to solve. The good news is that you don't need to be a therapist to create a healthier workplace. You need awareness, empathy, clear habits, and a willingness to respond with care.
Workplace mental health includes difficult experiences like workplace stress, anxiety, depression, and burnout. It also includes positive states such as resilience, compassion, purpose, and well-being. A mentally healthy workplace doesn't mean nobody struggles. It means people can speak up earlier, get support more easily, and work in an environment that doesn't negatively impact mental health.
In India, this topic also sits inside real cultural pressures. Family expectations, economic uncertainty, long working hours, career competition, and hesitation around therapy or counselling all shape how employees experience distress. That makes practical leadership even more important.
Understanding Workplace Mental Health
Workplace mental health is the connection between a person's psychological well-being and their work environment. It includes how people feel during the workday, how they handle pressure, how safe they feel speaking up, and whether the organisation supports health in practice, not just in policy.
Many managers think mental health means only serious illness. That's a common misunderstanding. In daily work life, it often shows up first as reduced focus, irritability, poor sleep, emotional exhaustion, fear about job stability, or a feeling that one can't switch off after office hours.
It exists on a spectrum
A team member can be productive and still be struggling. Another employee may look cheerful in meetings and still carry heavy anxiety. Someone else may not meet the threshold for a clinical condition but still feel worn down by relentless workplace stress.
That's why it helps to think in three broad zones:
- Stable and supported: The person feels challenged but not overwhelmed, and can recover after pressure.
- Strained but functioning: The person is coping, but signs of stress, anxiety, or low mood are building.
- Distressed and needing support: The person may need adjustments, counselling, therapy, medical guidance, or time to recover.
None of these states say anything about character or commitment. They describe human responses to pressure.
A healthy workplace doesn't ask people to be unaffected by stress. It helps them handle stress without losing dignity, safety, or hope.
Why managers need a broader view
Managers often focus on deadlines, performance, and behaviour. Those matter. But people's behaviour usually makes more sense when you ask what pressure they're carrying.
For example, a team member who misses follow-ups may not be careless. They may be mentally overloaded. A colleague who becomes sharp or withdrawn may not be “difficult”. They may be exhausted, worried, or ashamed to admit they're struggling.
Positive psychology belongs in this conversation too. Resilience, happiness, compassion, and emotional balance are not soft extras. They shape whether people recover after setbacks, ask for help early, and support each other under pressure.
What good support looks like
A mentally healthier workplace usually has a few visible traits:
| Area | What employees notice |
|---|---|
| Leadership behaviour | Managers check in respectfully and don't mock vulnerability |
| Work design | Expectations are clearer, and pressure is discussed openly |
| Support pathways | People know where to go for counselling, therapy, or HR help |
| Team culture | Colleagues don't treat stress or depression as weakness |
This is shared work. HR can build systems, leaders can shape culture, and employees can use support. When all three move together, workplace mental health stops being a compliance document and starts becoming part of everyday management.
The Reality of Mental Health in Indian Workplaces
Mental health at work has a human cost, and it also has a business cost. In India, those two realities are closely linked. When people are emotionally drained, teams feel it in missed deadlines, conflict, disengagement, absenteeism, and quiet underperformance.
According to Deloitte's report on mental health and employers, mental health conditions in India's workplace incur an economic cost of approximately INR 110,000 crore, roughly US$14 billion, annually, driven by absenteeism, attrition, and reduced productivity. For leaders, that means this issue affects not only well-being but also operations, retention, and long-term organisational stability.

What the cost really means
The business language can sound cold, so it helps to translate it into daily examples. Absenteeism is when someone can't come to work because they're unwell. Presenteeism is more subtle. The person is present, but they can't fully focus, decide, collaborate, or contribute at their usual level.
In practice, managers may notice things like:
- Slower thinking: Good employees taking much longer on familiar tasks
- Emotional friction: Small disagreements becoming bigger than they should
- Reduced initiative: People doing the minimum because they're mentally depleted
- Frequent withdrawal: Camera off, silence in meetings, and low engagement over time
These aren't always attitude problems. Often, they're signs that a person's internal resources are running low.
Why the pressure feels so intense in India
Indian workplaces often combine ambition with uncertainty. Employees may deal with long commutes, family obligations, pressure to be constantly available, and fear of falling behind peers. For many, job insecurity adds another layer of anxiety that a standard wellness talk doesn't touch.
A manager might say, “Take care of yourself,” while also rewarding only the people who stay online late every night. That mixed message confuses teams. It tells employees that well-being is welcome in theory, but risky in practice.
Business reality: If leaders ignore workplace stress for too long, the effects often appear first as performance problems, not as clear requests for help.
Why generic wellness advice isn't enough
Yoga sessions, meditation apps, and celebration days can help some people. But they don't fix structural problems like unclear roles, harsh management, impossible timelines, or fear around layoffs. If the system creates chronic stress, individual coping tools can only do so much.
That's why mature organisations look at both sides of the issue:
- Personal support: counselling access, therapy options, peer support, self-help tools
- Organisational design: manageable workloads, fair expectations, respectful leadership, psychological safety
When managers understand this difference, they stop asking only, “Why isn't this employee coping better?” and start asking, “What in the work environment is adding to the strain?”
Your Legal and Human Responsibilities as an Employer
Every employer in India has a duty that goes beyond salary, leaves, and policy manuals. People spend a large part of their lives at work. If the workplace creates avoidable psychological harm, leaders can't treat that as a private issue for the employee to solve alone.
The legal picture matters here, but the human principle is simpler. Employers are responsible for building an environment where people aren't punished, sidelined, or mocked for mental health challenges.
What the law is trying to protect
India's legal framework recognises mental health rights. Yet there is often a gap between rights on paper and daily workplace reality. As noted in the Indian Journal of Medical Research article on workplace stress, despite the Mental Healthcare Act (2017) guaranteeing non-discrimination, laws are often “not executed or regulated effectively,” leaving employees with mental disorders unable to verbalize problems and experiencing distress privately.
That sentence matters because it describes what many managers miss. Silence at work doesn't always mean everything is fine. Sometimes it means the employee doesn't trust the system enough to speak.
What new managers should do in practice
Legal responsibility becomes real through everyday behaviour. Employees usually judge the workplace by what their manager does in ordinary moments, not by what the handbook says.
A useful starting point is this checklist:
- Protect dignity: Don't joke about anxiety, depression, burnout, therapy, or medication.
- Respond early: If someone's behaviour changes, check in privately instead of waiting for a formal crisis.
- Keep privacy in mind: A manager doesn't need every personal detail to offer support or involve HR appropriately.
- Avoid punishment disguised as performance management: If a struggling employee needs support, start there before labelling them “uncommitted”.
- Know your internal route: Be clear on when to refer to HR, occupational support, counselling services, or emergency response.
Compliance is not the same as culture
Many companies have policies that mention well-being, inclusion, or non-discrimination. Those are important, but they don't automatically create safety. Employees watch how managers handle leave requests, performance dips, emotional conversations, and return-to-work moments.
Here's a simple contrast:
| Policy only | Policy plus practice |
|---|---|
| Mental health support exists on paper | Managers actively remind people how to access support |
| Anti-discrimination statement exists | Leaders stop stigma in meetings and side conversations |
| Leave is technically available | Employees can use it without being quietly penalised |
Manager's rule of thumb: If an employee would feel safer telling a friend than telling their manager, the workplace still has work to do.
The deeper responsibility
You're not expected to diagnose, treat, or fix someone. You are expected to lead fairly. That means reducing unnecessary stress where you can, responding compassionately when someone struggles, and making sure help is reachable without shame.
That approach protects the employee. It also protects the organisation from becoming the kind of place where people suffer privately until the problem becomes much harder to address.
Recognising Signs of Distress and Using Assessments
Managers usually notice the impact of distress before they hear the words. A person may not say, “I'm experiencing anxiety” or “I think I'm burning out.” They may become quieter, more forgetful, more reactive, or less able to keep up with work that used to feel manageable.
That's why observation matters. Not to label people, but to notice when support may be needed.

Signs that deserve attention
Some signs are emotional. Others appear in performance, communication, or physical habits. One sign alone doesn't confirm a problem, but a pattern is worth noticing.
Common indicators include:
- Behavioural changes: withdrawal from colleagues, irritability, unusual defensiveness, or less participation
- Work pattern shifts: missed deadlines, reduced concentration, repeated errors, or disengagement from tasks
- Physical signs: visible fatigue, headaches, poor sleep, appetite changes, or low energy
- Attendance concerns: frequent absences, sudden leave requests, or repeated lateness
- Cognitive strain: trouble making decisions, remembering details, or staying organised
A manager's role is not to interpret these as proof of a diagnosis. Your role is to recognise that something may be affecting the person's well-being and to respond with curiosity and care.
How to start the conversation
The most helpful opening is often the simplest. Focus on what you've observed, not what you think is wrong.
For example:
- “I've noticed you seem more stretched than usual. How are you doing?”
- “You don't seem like yourself lately. Is there anything affecting work that you'd like to talk through?”
- “I've seen a change in your energy and focus. Would some support or adjustment help right now?”
These questions invite conversation without pressure. They also reduce shame because they don't assume weakness or failure.
Don't ask, “What's your diagnosis?” Ask, “What support would help you do your work more safely and sustainably?”
Where assessments fit in
Some employees find it hard to describe what they're feeling. That's where structured tools can help. A review highlighted by 1to1help on workplace mental health in India notes that workplace anxiety among Indian workers ranges from 7% to 57%, and depression ranges from 10% to 52.9%. These wide ranges show why assessments are informational tools to guide support, not make a final diagnosis.
That point is essential. Assessments can help a person notice patterns in mood, stress, or resilience. They can guide the next step, which may be self-help, counselling, therapy, coaching, or psychiatric care. They are not a label and they aren't the final word on someone's mental health.
If someone wants a simple starting point for self-reflection, they might explore mood states assessment tools that help track patterns in feelings like tension, fatigue, and confusion. Used thoughtfully, tools like this can support awareness before a person decides what kind of help they need.
What managers should avoid
When you notice signs of distress, a few responses usually make things worse:
- Minimising it: “Everyone is stressed.”
- Moralising it: “You need to be stronger.”
- Diagnosing it: “You definitely have burnout.”
- Turning it into gossip: discussing concerns casually with others
A better response is steady, private, and respectful. Notice the change. Check in. Offer support options. Then follow up.
How to Build a Mentally Healthy Workplace Culture
Culture is what employees learn from repeated experience. It's the tone in meetings, the way managers react under pressure, and the hidden rules about whether it's safe to say, “I'm not coping well.” If you want better workplace mental health, culture has to do more than look supportive. It has to behave supportively.

Start with what people experience every day
A healthy culture usually doesn't begin with a campaign. It begins with ordinary management habits. Are workloads discussed openly? Can people ask for help without being judged? Do managers reward only visible overwork, or do they value sustainable performance?
Leaders can build trust through small but consistent actions:
- Name pressure early: say when a period will be demanding and discuss how the team will manage it
- Clarify priorities: if everything is urgent, employees stay anxious and confused
- Normalise support: mention counselling, therapy, and well-being resources as routine tools, not last resorts
- Model boundaries: if managers send the message that rest is laziness, employees will hide strain until it becomes serious
Move beyond wellness theatre
Some organisations put energy into awareness days, posters, or motivational talks. Those can be useful, but they don't replace structural support. If the team faces unrealistic timelines, poor role clarity, or public shaming from leaders, no amount of positive messaging will feel credible.
A stronger approach includes a mix of prevention and support:
| Focus area | What it looks like in practice |
|---|---|
| Policy | Clear anti-discrimination and well-being policies that people can actually use |
| Manager capability | Training managers to recognise distress, respond sensitively, and refer appropriately |
| Work design | More realistic planning, clearer responsibilities, and less avoidable chaos |
| Support access | Practical routes to counselling, therapy, leave, or workplace adjustments |
Here's a useful discussion to bring into leadership conversations:
Positive psychology has a place at work
Recovery matters, but prevention matters too. Teams function better when leaders actively build resilience, compassion, gratitude, and psychological safety. These ideas don't mean pretending everything is fine. They mean creating conditions where people can recover after setbacks, speak openly, and feel valued as human beings.
A few examples make this concrete:
- A manager thanks someone for raising a workload risk early instead of criticising them for “complaining”.
- A team lead checks whether a high performer is overloaded, rather than assuming they can absorb endless extra work.
- Colleagues ask, “What support do you need?” instead of “Why can't you handle this?”
Culture test: If people only feel safe discussing stress after they've already hit a breaking point, the culture is still reactive.
Reduce stigma around care
Employees are more likely to seek help when leaders speak about care in normal language. Therapy isn't only for crisis. Counselling isn't a sign of weakness. Taking support for anxiety, depression, or burnout can be part of responsible self-management, just like getting help for a physical health concern.
Managers don't need perfect words. They need respectful ones. When people hear calm, non-judgemental language from leadership, they're more likely to ask for support before problems deepen.
Practical Well-being Strategies for Every Employee
Employees can't control every workplace condition, but they can build habits that protect their energy, improve self-awareness, and make it easier to ask for help early. Practical well-being isn't about being cheerful all the time. It's about noticing strain, responding sooner, and using support without shame.

Start with daily regulation
When workplace stress rises, people often abandon the very habits that help them cope. They skip breaks, eat irregularly, work late, and stay mentally switched on long after the workday ends. Over time, that can intensify anxiety, low mood, fatigue, and irritability.
A simple personal toolkit can help:
- Protect transition time: create a short routine between work and home, even if you work remotely
- Break the stress loop: stand up, stretch, breathe slowly, or step away briefly when your body feels overloaded
- Set one boundary clearly: for example, define a realistic cut-off time for non-urgent messages
- Acknowledge your state: “I'm tense”, “I'm exhausted”, or “I'm worried” is more useful than pretending you're fine
Know when self-help isn't enough
Self-care matters, but it has limits. If distress is persistent, affects sleep, concentration, motivation, relationships, or your ability to function, professional support may help. That support might include counselling, therapy, coaching, medical advice, or a combination of these.
Some people wait because they think others have it worse. Others worry they need to be in crisis before asking for help. Neither is true. Support can be useful when things feel confusing, heavy, or hard to manage, even if you're still showing up to work every day.
Pay attention to gendered stress
Workplace pressure doesn't affect everyone in the same way. A 2022 McKinsey Health Survey cited in this LinkedIn post by Happy Place to Work India found that 72% of female employees in India experience severe workplace stress, compared to 54% of men. That gap matters.
Women may face layered demands across work, caregiving, safety concerns, social expectations, and emotional labour. Managers should respond with compassion, not assumptions. Employees should also feel permitted to ask for support that reflects their actual context.
If your body is always braced, your mind rarely feels rested. Small recovery habits are not indulgent. They help you stay functional.
Use support tools with clarity
Some employees like journalling. Others prefer guided exercises, peer support, or structured planning. HR teams and managers who want practical ideas for designing supportive routines may find this HR playbook for employee wellness useful as a conversation starter for healthier team habits.
One more reminder matters here. Assessments can be helpful for reflection, but they are informational, not diagnostic. They can point you towards what kind of support may help. They don't replace a qualified professional's judgement.
If you're struggling, the next step doesn't have to be dramatic. It can be as simple as speaking to someone you trust, asking HR what support exists, or booking a first counselling or therapy session.
Your Commitment to a More Compassionate Workplace
A more humane workplace doesn't appear all at once. It grows through repeated choices made by managers, HR teams, leaders, and employees. Some of those choices are structural, like fair workloads and clear policies. Others are personal, like listening without judgement when someone says they're not doing well.
The strongest organisations don't treat workplace mental health as an annual initiative. They treat it as part of how people are managed every day. That means noticing stress before it becomes crisis, respecting privacy, reducing stigma around counselling and therapy, and creating room for both recovery and resilience.
What lasting progress often looks like
It usually looks ordinary at first. A manager checks in sooner. A team lead resets an unrealistic deadline. An employee uses counselling before burnout deepens. HR updates a process so support is easier to access and less intimidating.
These actions may seem small, but they shape culture over time.
- Compassion becomes visible when people aren't punished for being honest.
- Resilience becomes realistic when teams have support, not just slogans.
- Well-being becomes credible when leaders align expectations with human limits.
Keep the standard practical and kind
Perfection isn't the goal. People will still have hard weeks, stressful projects, and moments of struggle. What matters is whether the workplace adds unnecessary harm or helps people recover with dignity.
If you're a manager, start with one question. What can I change this month so my team feels safer asking for help? If you're an employee, ask yourself something just as important. What support have I been postponing because I thought I should handle this alone?
Progress in workplace mental health often begins before anyone feels fully ready. It starts when someone chooses to respond with care instead of silence.
A compassionate workplace is good for performance, retention, and trust. It's also the right way to treat people. That's reason enough to keep going.
If you're looking for a trusted place to take the next step, DeTalks can help you find qualified therapists, psychologists, and mental health professionals, explore confidential evidence-based assessments, and access support for concerns ranging from workplace stress, anxiety, depression, and burnout to resilience, happiness, and emotional well-being.













































