Why employees hate EAPs
May 1, 2008 by Bill MeltzerPosted in: Employee Assistance Programs (EAPs), HIPAA, Special Report
Many EAPS fall into a common - and dangerous - category: Management thinks the program is great, but employees think it’s a waste. But it doesn’t have to be that way if you have an EAP or are considering one.
Seventy-three percent of all firms (59% of small employers) have an EAP. But how well does the typical EAP work? Not as well as we’d hope. A Mid America Coalition on Health Care study found:
- just 50% of 6,400 workers surveyed said they’d use the EAP if they felt overwhelmed by personal issues, and
- one-third said they didn’t even know how to access its resources.
The good news: Firms like yours have seen dramatic improvements in three relatively simple steps
1. Employee attitude surveys
The best starting place: Take the pulse of your employees with a short, confidential attitude survey.
Objectives: Ask employees if they know how to use the EAP’s resources. Then test workers’ knowledge and opinions of depression and other personal issues that may affect their workplace performance and/or safety. In the final section, find out how employees would handle a serious personal issue.
In other words, find out where your people would likely turn for help. Would workers seek out the EAP? Would they prefer to discuss the issue with their family doctor? A mental health professional?
The Mid America Coalition’s survey remains an excellent design model from which to craft a survey for your own employees.
2. Promote EAP through education
Your survey data should help you pinpoint areas where employees need more education about your EAP. Some awareness-boosting techniques that have gotten results:
- Lunch-and-learn sessions. Possible topics include dealing with personal-finance stress, caring for elderly parents, understanding depression or dealing with a dependent who has potential mental health issues.
- Employee newsletter. If you have a benefits newsletter, spotlight the EAP from time to time. Some companies without newsletters have done e-mail campaigns or targeted mailings instead.
- Workplace posters spotlighting EAP. The ones that work best are often posters designed around a specific theme (e.g., anxiety about personal debt) rather than a general “need help?” message. In addition to posters, you may want to distribute wallet cards with EAP contact info.
Need help finding educational material? There’s lots of free EAP-related handouts and FAQs here. Remember: When doing EAP education, constantly remind employees that the program is strictly confidential.
3. Work with supervisors
For legal reasons, supervisors need to tread carefully when they suspect an employee has a mental health issue.
What you don’t want: supervisors taking disciplinary actions without consulting HR or playing amateur psychologist and “diagnosing” the employee’s problems. Here is a PDF of some proven tips and talking points for doing supervisor-specific EAP education.
HIPAA compliance: Beware non-discrimination issues
HIPAA’s non-discrimination rules impact both mental health benefits and general health plans. Under current interpretations, health plans can no longer have benefits exclusions that deny benefits for injuries resulting directly or indirectly from pre-existing mental health issues.
That’s true even if the psychological condition wasn’t diagnosed until after the injury and even if the injury was self-inflicted. Example: Suppose an employee gets hurt in a workplace accident he or she caused. After the fact, the employee is diagnosed with a mood disorder that previously escaped detection by the employee’s doctor.
Under current regs, HIPAA-covered plans can’t deny benefits. This puts employers in a bind. Mental health issues like depression, anxiety or bipolar disorder are among the medical conditions that’re most likely to go undiagnosed or underdiagnosed.
That’s why, in most organizations, having a strong EAP is one of your best compliance tools.


May 1st, 2008 at 11:27 am
The problem I have discovered with phone EAP’s is that the caller is connected with an automated system - The suicidal person would probably commit suicide trying to get to a real person and converse. The automated system starts asking name, plan #, SS#, are you a family member or subscriber? etc., etc.
Then it will say ” all counselors are busy. Put in your callback # starting with area code - OR
” Mrs. Jones is out today. She is the individual you need to talk to”
I have tested all of the different EAP’s - United Healthcare, Principal, MetLIfe - all of those phone EAP’s have the same shortfalls.
May 1st, 2008 at 12:44 pm
Linda,
My company, EAP Network, is live answered around the clock. We’ve been in business for over 25 years and do not have and have never had an automated system that you describe. I certainly understand your frustration with such systems. I definitely prefer talking to person rather than a machine, especially in times of stress.
I wanted to make sure that you knew that a few companies’ practices do not account for all. There are literally hundreds of EAP programs across the country. The ones you cite are major insurance firms. The vast majority of EAP companies’ only provide employee assistance programs and are not a side benefit of major health insurance companies. Insurance companies offering EAPs is a fairly new trend.
May 1st, 2008 at 12:46 pm
We use a local EAP with a phone that is answered by a receptionist and a team of counselors who are there to provide service to employees and their families. Because they are local, they also come out and do trainings (4 hours/year included in contract) as well as on-site counseling (i.e. if an employee is involved in a fatal car accident). The only problem with a more local firm is that they are not open 24/7; and although they have an answering service who will contact one of their professionals in the event of an emergency, there have been complaints from employees that they do not have a 24/7 help line. Now, however, as part of our dental plan with Guardian, we do have a “phone line” EAP in addition to our other EAP.