Pubdate: Sat, 07 Oct 2006
Source: Royal Gazette, The (Bermuda)
Copyright: 2006 The Royal Gazette Ltd.
Contact:  http://www.theroyalgazette.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2103
Author:  Jonathan Kent

BENEDICT'S EAP IS IN GREAT DEMAND AS STRESS LEVELS  AMONG WORKERS SOAR

BENEDICT Associates Ltd. has been helping Bermuda's  employees stay 
on an even keel and remain productive  for more than two decades.

 From relationship problems to drugs, from alcoholism 
to  difficulties with the boss, the company has helped  employers and 
their staff overcome multiple obstacles.

But Benedict's founder and managing director Vaughn  Mosher says he 
has never seen workers face more stress  than they do these days.

And he puts some of that extra strain down to the  gadgets that were 
designed to make life easier.

"If you surveyed the workforce, I'm sure you'd find  that people are 
working more hours than they did 20  years ago," Mr. Mosher said.

"Also the technologies that were supposed to give us  freedom have 
not done that. We are being bombarded by  three things in particular 
- -- voicemail, internet and  cell phones -- and it is almost 
impossible for people  to be out of reach.

"That means that even vacations are not what they once  were. And 
adding to the stress is that employers are  demanding more these days."

Little wonder then, that Benedict's Employee Assistance  Programme 
(EAP) is much in demand. Workers with  companies signed up to the 
service can either  confidentially seek help from Benedict or are 
referred  by management.

"What is surprising is that, year after year, we find  that about 80 
per cent of those who come to us are  simply using the EAP as a 
benefit, while only 20 per  cent have actually been referred to us," 
Mr. Mosher  said. "In the US, it's more like 50-50."

THE clients bring problems ranging from from alcoholism  and drug 
addiction to financial difficulties. "About 40  per cent of the 
people we see are having relationship  problems, whether it's 
work-related relationships,  family, personal or intimate 
relationships," Mr. Mosher  said.

"Around 15 per cent need psychiatric treatment, ranging  from people 
with neuroses to those who are into a full  schizophrenic break.

"Counselling is not the only solution. Sometimes team  building or 
organisational effectiveness need to be  addressed. Sometimes the 
emphasis is on persuading  management to adopt more realistic expectations."

Mr. Mosher added that what clients sometimes blamed on  a conflict of 
Bermudian and non-Bermudian, or of race,  or of gender, was often 
down simply to differing  expectations.

This often occurred after new management took over,  bringing in new 
expectations that were higher than what  the staff had been used to.

"Motivational counselling to encourage the person to  take action to 
improve their situation is another of  the most significant ways we 
can help," Mr. Mosher  said.

"And it's important that I have hope, because if I  don't, then how 
can I instil hope into someone else?"

Use of EAPs started in the US in the early 1970s, EAP  initially 
having stood for Employee Alcoholism  Programme. It was soon realised 
there was a need for a  wider focus and so the "A" came to stand for 
"assistance".

Mr. Mosher was busying studying towards two master's  degrees at 
Boston College and at Johns Hopkins  University, in subjects 
including social psychology,  behavioural sciences and community 
mental health, as  EAPs began to gain credibility in the business world.

"Companies realised that it was a cost-effective  investment," Mr. 
Mosher recalled. "The cost of  terminating an employee and rehiring 
was much greater  than using an EAP to keep them employed. A business 
can  expect a three-to-one ratio return on its investment in  an EAP.

"It's the right thing to do, but it also makes business sense."

In the early 1980s, Canadian Dr. David Archibald  carried out a 
survey of the Bermuda workforce, which  found that alcohol and drugs 
were having a significant  negative effect on employees and their 
employers. His  recommendations included the creation of an EAP for 
the  island.

But when Mr. Mosher came back from university and tried  to sell the 
idea to the authorities, he met with an  unenthusiastic response.

"While the US was open to privatisation, Bermuda was at  that time 
more used to the British model of the time,  with health being very 
much a public sector concern,"  Mr. Mosher said.

"I pitched it to the Government as something that could  work with 
the public and private sectors coming  together, but the 
decision-makers gave it the thumbs  down.

"So I got together with a few people and we pushed  ahead with it privately."

COMPANY boss Alan Burland was one of the original  backers when 
Benedict Associates Ltd. was formed in  1985, along with psychologist 
Michael Ashton,  businessman and trainer Stuart Doyle and Mr. Mosher.

The EAP, which is still Benedict's core service, is now  accepted by 
many employers as important to their  business. Mr. Mosher estimates 
that around 75 per cent  of the workforce is covered by an EAP, 
either with  Benedict or with EAP of Bermuda, the Government-run  equivalent.

"It is like an insurance policy in some ways but not  others," Mr. Mosher said.

"The employer pays for 100 per cent of the EAP,  compared to half for 
health insurance. People use EAPs  in two different ways. Employees 
can use it as a  personal benefit, or the employer can send a person 
with work performance problems to us.

"Either way, there are no claim forms like there would  be with 
health insurance. Everything is totally  confidential."

Around 60 employers have enrolled with Benedict, mostly  large 
companies. The company offers a special,  capitated (flat fee per 
employee) service for smaller  companies, with fewer than 15 employees.

Benedict has a programme for schoolchildren, which  works in a 
similar way to its EAP. The Student  Assistance Programme offers help 
to youngsters having  difficulties at school. Schools sign up to the 
service,  which is free to the children.

ONE consultant is working on a school placement  programme, which 
helps to match up students to the  right colleges overseas, 
particularly those with  special needs.

And the company also offers consultancy to employers in 
organisational effectiveness.

Drug testing is another arm of Benedict's wide-ranging work.

In the last year, the company has carried out around  1,800 drug 
tests. Mr. Mosher said there were four  distinct types of test.

Pre-employment testing was carried out on people  applying for jobs 
with client, random testing on  employees, target testing on those 
with a drugs history  and testing with reasonable cause, on those who 
were  suspected of having taken drugs.

Testing has become quicker and easier since Benedict  acquired 
high-tech equipment that enables them to  verify whether someone is 
drug-free in double-quick  time.

"We have a dedicated computer that is electronically  linked to a 
laboratory in Kansas City," Mr. Mosher  said. "We put in the sample 
at this end and within four  minutes, we have results back from Kansas.

"If it says the sample needs to be confirmed, that  means it is not 
drug-free and it then has to be sent to  a Government lab for confirmation."

The system tests for illicit drugs, such as marijuana,  cocaine and 
heroin, as well as legally prescribed  drugs, which make up an 
increasing proportion of drug  abuse cases.Mr. Mosher, 59, a 
Rotarian, loves his work and gains  great satisfaction from successes 
with clients.

"Some people say to me that it's time to retire, but I  enjoy my work 
- -- though I'm not a work-aholic - and I  find great pleasure in 
helping people," Mr. Mosher  said. "And there is so much still to do."
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MAP posted-by: Elaine