Mental health and work: Sweden
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Paris
OECD Publishing - Paris
2013
130 p.
disability benefit ; educational system ; implementation ; labour law ; labour market ; mental health ; return to work ; sick leave ; statistics ; working conditions
Occupational accidents and diseases
http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264188730-en
English
Bibliogr.
978-92-64-18873-0
"Tackling mental ill-health of the working-age population is becoming a key issue for labour market and social policies in OECD countries. OECD governments increasingly recognise that policy has a major role to play in keeping people with mental ill-health in employment or bringing those outside of the labour market back to it, and in preventing mental illness. This report on Sweden is the second in a series of reports looking at how the broader education, health, social and labour market policy challenges identified in Sick on the Job? Myths and Realities about Mental Health and Work (OECD, 2012) are being tackled in a number of OECD countries. It concludes that Swedish policy makers recognise the need to take steps to tackle mental ill-health and its labour market implications, but that a more comprehensive reform effort and a long-term commitment to it is needed in order to prevent problems from arising in the first place and respond more effectively when they do occur."
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