Health Minister Dzulkefly Ahmad’s announcement that the Ministry of Health (MOH) is developing a workplace mental health policy is necessary.
This reflects an important step in recognising that mental health as a broader workplace and public health issue. In this rapid and digitalised era, many experience work-related stress, burnout, anxiety, and depression.
Therefore, creating psychologically healthy workplaces is an essential step towards improving individual well-being and national productivity.
However, workplace mental health cannot be viewed from a socially disconnected domain in this age of declining fertility rates and rapidly aging society. Employees do not leave their personal lives at the office door.
They are young adults fearing the complexity of commitments to come, mothers recovering from childbirth, fathers adjusting to parenthood, caregivers supporting ageing parents, and individuals balancing financial pressures, family, and social expectations.
The workplace often reflects the cumulative effects of experiences that begin long before employment. If Malaysia is serious about promoting mental well-being, prevention should start well before adulthood.
From a pro-family positioning, conversation should begin in pregnancy and early parenthood – which are periods of profound psychological adjustment.
While maternal physical health is routinely monitored, emotional well-being often receives less attention. Anxiety during pregnancy, postpartum depression, and the emotional challenges of becoming a parent affect not only mothers but also fathers, whose mental health remains largely overlooked in policy and practice.
Untreated psychological distress during this period can influence parent-child attachment, family relationships, and children’s cognitive and emotional development.
As children grow, the pressures on families evolve. Parents today are raising children in an increasingly complex social environment shaped by rising living costs, demanding work schedules, digital technology, cyberbullying, academic competition, and concerns about identity and belonging.
Adolescents face unprecedented exposure to social media and online influences, while parents often struggle to navigate these challenges alongside their own emotional and financial burdens.
They are manifestations of the broader social determinants of health. Housing insecurity, income inequality, limited childcare, fragmented family support systems, and unequal access to mental health services all influence psychological well-being across generations.
A workplace mental health policy, while essential, addresses only one point along this continuum. Beyond mental health hotline modalities, Malaysia therefore has an opportunity to adopt a broader life-course approach to mental health.
Instead of focusing primarily on interventions once people enter the workforce, policies should promote mental well-being from pregnancy through childhood, adolescence, and adulthood.
Such an approach recognises that mental health is shaped by experiences across the life course and that early investment yields long-term health, educational, social, and economic benefits.
This has important implications for policy. Workplace mental health policy should be accompanied by a national strategy that integrates parental and child health, education, employment, and social welfare.
Mental health screening during antenatal and postnatal care should become routine for both mothers and fathers.
Family-friendly workplace policies, including flexible work arrangements and adequate parental leave, should support parents during the early years of child-rearing.
Schools should be equipped not only to respond to mental health crises but also to promote emotional resilience and mental health literacy from an early age.
Equally important is stronger collaboration across ministries. Mental health cannot remain the responsibility of the MOH alone.
Sustainable solutions require coordinated action involving the Ministries of Education, Human Resources, and Women, Family and Community Development, recognising that health, education, employment, and social protection are deeply interconnected.
The implications for practice are equally significant. Primary care providers, obstetricians, nurses, paediatricians, psychologists, and educators all have opportunities to identify psychological distress early and intervene before problems become more severe.
Mental health should be integrated into routine health care rather than treated as a specialist service accessed only after a crisis has occurred.
Employers also have an important role to play. Beyond employee assistance programmes, organisations should cultivate psychologically safe workplaces through supportive leadership, flexible working arrangements, reasonable workloads, and training for managers to recognise and respond appropriately to mental health concerns.
Such initiatives are especially important for employees balancing work with parenting and caregiving responsibilities.
Social workers, meanwhile, remain one of the most underutilised professions in Malaysia’s mental health landscape. Their role extends beyond crisis intervention to prevention, family strengthening, and community development.
Social workers are uniquely positioned to support expectant parents through psychosocial assessments, parenting education, and referrals to community resources. They can identify families experiencing financial hardship, domestic stress, or social isolation before these challenges escalate into mental health crises.
As children enter adolescence, social workers can continue to bridge families, schools, health care providers, and community organisations. Whether addressing bullying, family conflict, digital safety, or emotional distress, their holistic understanding of the social determinants of health enables them to provide coordinated support that extends beyond clinical care.
Dzulkefly’s proposed workplace mental health policy is an encouraging step forward. However, if Malaysia is to improve mental well-being in a meaningful and sustainable way, the conversation cannot begin at the workplace alone. It must begin with healthy pregnancies, supported parents, resilient children, and connected communities.
Investing in families from the earliest stages of life is one of the most effective public health and economic investments a nation can make.
A mentally healthy workforce is built upon mentally healthy families, and mentally healthy families are built through policies that recognise well-being as a lifelong journey rather than a workplace intervention alone.
June Joseph is a health sociologist and Honorary Senior Fellow with the University of Queensland, focusing on breastfeeding, postpartum care, systems accountability, and governance.
- This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of CodeBlue.
