With the loosening of lockdown guidelines of the COVID-19 pandemic, HR directors, CEO’s and other organisation managers will be thinking hard and planning the return to work and how to protect themselves and their team members from this particular virus and any other seasonal bug that comes along.

In many cases, due to the physical limitation of space it is not feasible to separate working places, meeting rooms, the use of toilets, the space for lunch and coffee breaks to observe the social distancing guidelines. Therefore, what steps can be taken to protect the environment and people within it?

THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PHYSICAL AND MENTAL ILL HEALTH

Physical and mental health is considered an individual matter. However, the physical work environment, leadership and general work conditions all affect levels of mental and physical health, which in turn affects focus, drive productivity and overall performance. Knowing how to look after yourself and being responsible to maximise health and energy is key to productivity and performance, both of yourself as a leader as well as those that you lead. It could easily be considered and included as a part of any job description and job responsibilities, saving organisations thousands of pounds from lost work-days due to sickness. Figures taken from the 2017 Britain’s Healthiest Workplace survey conducted by Vitality Health in partnership with Cambridge, RAND Europe and Mercer, with almost 32,000 employees within 167 companies, found that employees lose an average of 30.4 working days a year due to sickness, or illness-related underperformance, costing the UK economy a staggering £77.5 billion a year, an increase of 6.2% on the previous year.

CAN WE LEARN ANYTHING FROM COVID-19 ABOUT IMMUNE HEALTH?

The immune system is responsible for protecting our health through surveillance scanning for bacteria, toxins and viruses. It is a network running throughout the body that includes lymph nodes and vessels, the skin as the first line of defence, as well as the thymus gland. Immune defence is divided into two aspects and can be likened to an army – the first line of defence, known as the non-specific immune that is fast acting, and the specific immune which is slow to respond as it distinguishes between friend and foe. Extensive research has identified that 70% of immune health is in gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT). Therefore, an unhealthy gut weakens the immune as well as affecting mental health due to the gut-brain connection via the gut-brain axis.

WATCH MY VIDEO ON THIS HERE:

WHAT COMPROMISES THE IMMUNE SYSTEM?

In a regular day, our immune copes with the effects of household and industrial chemicals, food additives and preservatives, electromagnetic radiation also known as electro-smog from exposure to Wifi driven and other devices reliant on electricity and non-ionizing radiation, as well as environmental toxins, antibiotics, vaccines and stress we experience in our work and personal lives. As leaders, taking care of the immune system is critical if we want our bodies and minds and those of our employees, to deliver top performance through energy and mental focus. Building a healthy immune does not have to be difficult or time consuming. Just like brushing teeth, showering and eating, maintaining a healthy immune becomes an integral part of our way of life when we know what to do.

WHAT ARE THE MARKERS OF A POORLY FUNCTIONING IMMUNE SYSTEM?

The main markers of a poorly functioning immune are:

TIPS TO MAINTAIN A HEALTHY IMMUNE SYSTEM

Maintaining a healthy immune assumes that it was formed correctly from birth by the baby passing through the birth canal, feeding on breast milk, nature’s protective mechanism to pass on antibodies to the newly born child and then as the baby grows to pick up pathogens through playing in the dirt. In this case, it can probably be assumed, unless the child has had antibiotics for some reason, that the immune system is functioning effectively. In a post COVID world, there are steps we all need to take to create strong immune health in us all. Read here for more information.

Tips to maintain a healthy immune system1. MANAGE STRESS IN YOUR STRIDE:

2. HYDRATE AND EAT HEALTHY FOODS:

3. BODY CONDITIONING:

4. KNOW YOUR LIMITS AND REST:

5. HAVE FUN!

As leaders, when we create an environment that is fun to work in, employees want to come to work to get more of what they love. The benefit to the employer is a productive, effective team of happy, healthy people who are focused, loving what they do and who they do it with.

As managers and leaders how much would you save, and gain, if your main focus and goal was to create a work environment that is a happy, fun place to be?

To book Rachel to speak at your event, please contact Rachel directly at rachel@greenkeypersonaldevelopment.com

References:

ABL

Hifas da Terra Mycotherapy

Mayo clinic

NCBI

Rachel ShackletonRachel Shackleton, Founder of Green Key Personal Development and Green Key Health is a leadership trainer, medical herbalist and naturopath specializing in corporate health through face-to-face, on-line and e-learning development solutions.

For more information contact Rachel on rachel@greenkeypersonaldevelopment.com