Close Menu
Machinery Asia
  • Home
  • Industry News
  • Heavy Machinery
  • Backhoe Loader
  • Excavators
  • Skid Steer
  • Videos
  • Shopping
  • News & Media
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Machinery Asia
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Industry News
  • Heavy Machinery
  • Backhoe Loader
  • Excavators
  • Skid Steer
  • Videos
  • Shopping
  • News & Media
Machinery Asia
You are at:Home » The conversation that can save a life in your workplace
Industry News

The conversation that can save a life in your workplace

Machinery AsiaBy Machinery AsiaJune 16, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Tumblr

Sidney Hawkins

Sidney Hawkins

The industry’s ability to deliver complex projects under pressure is a point of professional pride shared by every trade and every crew. However, a challenge is spreading to jobs that cannot be framed, welded or fed. The mental health of the construction workforce has reached a critical juncture, and most supervisors are ill-equipped to respond.

According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, “Nearly two-thirds (64%) of U.S. construction workers say they have experienced anxiety or depression in the past year, a sharp increase from 54% just a year ago…Stigma and fear are barriers to workers seeking help.” This silence has consequences. Construction workers commit suicide at a rate that exceeds almost every other industry in the country. Long hours, physical demands and job changes create conditions where stress can build up faster than it can be managed.

Why the misconception is the starting point

Building culture prides itself on doing so. This perseverance has built some of the most complex infrastructure projects in American history. It also made mental health one of the hardest topics to acknowledge in the workplace. Misconceptions are dispelled through repeated, honest conversations led by people the workers trust. When a supervisor directly acknowledges stress, it signals that asking for help is acceptable. This single shift in tone, supported consistently over time, changes the culture.

Mental health first aid

Mental health training programs provide workers and supervisors with a structured, evidence-based framework for identifying warning signs, starting a conversation, and connecting a colleague with the right help before a challenge turns into a crisis.

Key warning signs supervisors should recognize in a crew member:

  • Any action outside of normal behaviors
  • Avoid crew meetings, shared breaks, or common workplace areas
  • Requests sudden schedule or shift changes without explanation
  • Skip steps in established safety procedures or routine tasks
  • Reports persistent fatigue, headaches, or insomnia without a documented injury
  • Deflect direct questions about well-being with humor or irritation
  • Referrals who feel trapped, overwhelmed, or out of options

When these signs appear, the response should be direct and private. Ask the worker how he is doing. Listen without judgement. Have a resource ready, starting with the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, available 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Self care is a crew strategy

Individual well-being and team performance are not separate conversations. Lack of sleep, for example, can be a source of anxiety and depression. Fatigue increases stress, erodes judgment, and increases the likelihood of both mental health problems and workplace incidents. Normalizing self-care—adequate rest, work-life balance, regular peer visits, and visible access to support resources—strengthens the entire crew. It reduces turnover, sharpens focus, and creates the kind of cohesion that can carry a project through its toughest stretches.

Three actions any business can take today

First, the 988 Lifeline number belongs in every workplace, posted where workers can see it. Second, mental health resources should be a vital part of every onboarding process. Third, supervisors who complete a structured program such as Mental Health First Aid can walk into workplaces with a proven plan in hand, ready before a crisis hits.

The workers who build our infrastructure deserve a workplace culture that takes asking for help as seriously as wearing a helmet. Every crew has someone who needs to hear that help is available; make sure they hear it.

Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleBoise is expected to fall 6% after rising 10% in 2025
Machinery Asia
  • Website

Related Posts

Boise is expected to fall 6% after rising 10% in 2025

June 16, 2026

Mountain States News and Southwest People June/July 2026

June 16, 2026

Colorado Laser Research Facility, Nevada’s $200 Million Water Reuse Project and More

June 16, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
Don't Miss

The conversation that can save a life in your workplace

Boise is expected to fall 6% after rising 10% in 2025

Mountain States News and Southwest People June/July 2026

Colorado Laser Research Facility, Nevada’s $200 Million Water Reuse Project and More

Popular Posts

The conversation that can save a life in your workplace

June 16, 2026

Boise is expected to fall 6% after rising 10% in 2025

June 16, 2026

Mountain States News and Southwest People June/July 2026

June 16, 2026

Colorado Laser Research Facility, Nevada’s $200 Million Water Reuse Project and More

June 16, 2026
Heavy Machinery

Top 5 Trailer Safety Mistakes to Avoid Before Towing

June 11, 2026

How to Choose a Gooseneck Tilt Equipment Trailer for Your Business

June 8, 2026

As a double-axle tilting trailer facilitates the transport of vehicles and equipment

June 5, 2026

TYPHON Machinery Launches New xFlex Scissor Lift Series Designed for Safer and Smarter Modern Worksites

June 1, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.