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Bipolar Disorder in the Workplace, with Jacqui Chew, iFusion, and Colton Mulligan, FoxFuel Creative

July 15, 2021 by John Ray

Mental Health
Minneapolis St. Paul Studio
Bipolar Disorder in the Workplace, with Jacqui Chew, iFusion, and Colton Mulligan, FoxFuel Creative
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Mental Health

Workplace MVP:  Bipolar Disorder in the Workplace, with Jacqui Chew, iFusion, and Colton Mulligan, FoxFuel Creative

On this edition of Workplace MVP, Jacqui Chew, iFusion, and Colton Mulligan, FoxFuel Creative, each share their stories on working with a bipolar disorder with host Jamie Gassmann. Jacqui and Colton discuss how leaders can foster psychological safety in the workplace so that employees can be open about their mental health. It’s essential listening for HR and other workplace leaders. Workplace MVP is underwritten and presented by R3 Continuum and produced by the Minneapolis-St.Paul Studio of Business RadioX®.

Jacqui Chew, Managing Director, iFusion, and Licensee, Curator at TEDxAtlanta

Mental Health
Jackie Chew, Managing Partner, iFusion, TEDxAtlanta

iFusion is a storytelling consultancy that deploys the power of narrative design to create brand stories for companies and social impact initiatives that resonate and inspire action.

Jacqui works at the intersection of storytelling, innovation and business. She deploys the power of narrative design in reframing an organization’s brand story for resonance and to inspire action.

Described as a “Lara Croft of Problem-solving,” Jacqui is a seasoned business operator with a passion for building inclusive teams, and working cross-functionally to bring disparate groups together toward a common goal.

As the curator and licensee of TEDxAtlanta, Jacqui is always on the lookout for change-makers and innovations that are solving for the challenges of today and those just around the corner. Under her leadership, first of TEDxPeachtree from 2009 to 2018 and presently of TEDxAtlanta, Atlanta has grown in recognition within the global TEDx community as an innovation hub for technology, healthcare and social impact initiatives.

She is resourceful, tenacious and well networked in the Atlanta business, social impact and technology communities.

Website | LinkedIn | Jacqui’s TEDx video | Brain Babel

Colton Mulligan, CEO, FoxFuel Creative

Colton Mulligan, CEO, FoxFuel Creative

FoxFuel Creative produces effective outcomes for brands and people through design, content, and technology. The company helps consumer goods and products, healthcare, music and entertainment, finance, and real estate brands speak genuinely and effectively to their audience.

Their specialties include brand and marketing strategy, consumer insights, content development, creative ideation and execution, advertising concepts, and website development.

At FoxFuel, Colton Mulligan serves as CEO and is responsible for client relationships, guiding the discovery process through brand strategy into early creative concepting.

With 15+ years of branding and marketing experience, Colton has worked to develop brand and marketing strategies for TSA Pre-Check, Hilton Hotels/Home2Suites, Ben Folds, Fiesta Grande, Chip and Joanna Gaines, Pinnacle Bank, HarperCollins, Narus Health, Lifepoint, HCA, and Community Health Systems.

He also speaks at various events on Digital Marketing, Healthcare Marketing, Entrepreneurship, and the relationship between mental health and creativity. He lives in Nashville with his lovely wife Aly, and Goldendoodle JT.

Company website | LinkedIn

R3 Continuum

R3 Continuum is a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. R3c helps ensure the psychological and physical safety of organizations and their people in today’s ever-changing and often unpredictable world. Through their continuum of tailored solutions, including evaluations, crisis response, executive optimization, protective services, and more, they help organizations maintain and cultivate a workplace of wellbeing so that their people can thrive. Learn more about R3c at www.r3c.com.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

About Workplace MVP

Every day, around the world, organizations of all sizes face disruptive events and situations. Within those workplaces are everyday heroes in human resources, risk management, security, business continuity, and the C-suite. They don’t call themselves heroes though. On the contrary, they simply show up every day, laboring for the well-being of employees in their care, readying the workplace for and planning responses to disruption. This show, Workplace MVP, confers on these heroes the designation they deserve, Workplace MVP (Most Valuable Professionals), and gives them the forum to tell their story. As you hear their experiences, you will learn first-hand, real life approaches to readying the workplace, responses to crisis situations, and overcoming challenges of disruption. Visit our show archive here.

Workplace MVP Host Jamie Gassmann

In addition to serving as the host to the Workplace MVP podcast, Jamie Gassmann is the Director of Marketing at R3 Continuum (R3c). Collectively, she has more than fourteen years of marketing experience. Across her tenure, she has experience working in and with various industries including banking, real estate, retail, crisis management, insurance, business continuity, and more. She holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mass Communications with special interest in Advertising and Public Relations and a Master of Business Administration from Paseka School of Business, Minnesota State University.

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:04] Broadcasting from the Business RadioX Studios, it’s time for Workplace MVP. Workplace MVP is brought to you by R3 Continuum, a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. Now, here’s your host, Jamie Gassmann.
Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:25] Hi, everyone. Your host, Jamie Gassmann, here. And welcome to this episode of Workplace MVP. According to a recent study performed by Mental Health America, only five percent of employees surveyed indicated that they strongly agree that their employer provides a safe environment for employees who live with mental illness.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:44] With the increased availability of workplace resources and tools for ensuring the psychological safety of their employees, along with the increase in conversations globally about reducing the stigma of mental health, particularly in the workplace, this stat seems to indicate that there’s still a level of discomfort with employees being open and honest with their employers about their mental health in a large majority of workplaces.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:08] Which leads to the question of how can leaders within organizations help their employees to feel psychologically safe and to create work environments that invite open dialogue about how employees are truly feeling. Are there ways to create an environment that invites vulnerability, creates a feeling of safety for being open and honest with leadership, breaking down those walls of fear that so many employees are likely still having?

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:33] Well, today, we have two wonderful MVP’s that will share from their perspective, personal experiences and approaches for how organizational leadership can create a psychologically safe work environment. And with that, the benefits it can have on the employee, leader, and organization overall. With us is Colton Mulligan, CEO of FoxFuel Creative, and Jacqui Chew, Entrepreneur and Mental Health Advocate. Welcome to the show, Jacqui and Colton.

Jacqui Chew: [00:02:03] Thanks for having us.

Colton Mulligan: [00:02:04] Glad to be here.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:02:06] So, we’ll start off with our first Workplace MVP, who is Jacqui Chew, Entrepreneur and Mental Health Advocate. Share with us, Jacqui, a bit about your background and how you came to be a mental health advocate.

Jacqui Chew: [00:02:20] Thank you, Jamie, for having me. I have been on this journey since being diagnosed in 2005, it’s been a long time. And so, I was diagnosed at a time where mental health/mental illness was not discussed. There was still a heavy, heavy stigma around it. For the first few years, I’ve lived in silence, and in fear, and in shame with what I had. I was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 2005.

Jacqui Chew: [00:03:03] And at the time, I owned my own business. I had a marketing consultancy. And my main clientele were and they still are high growth startups that are either angel backed or venture capital backed. And those cultures tend to have a very hard charging, high performance base type culture. And I didn’t realize it at the time, but those are definitely stressors. They are conditions that exacerbate my illness.

Jacqui Chew: [00:03:49] So, today, though, happily after years of psychotherapy and I continue my treatment protocol, I am managing my condition quite a bit better. And here I am.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:04:06] Great. Yeah. Great to hear kind of some personal experience that you’ve worked through. So, from your perspective, taking that personal experience into account, when you look at the stat that only five percent of employees strongly agree that their workplace is a safe environment for those with a mental illness. What are your thoughts on that?

Jacqui Chew: [00:04:27] You know, sadly, the stigma behind mental health and just the dialogue around it, I mean, there’s still such shame. I recently had a conversation, actually, just a-week-and-a-half ago with a young professional who was very concerning. She had an anxiety, she felt anxious, she had already been diagnosed with depression, and she was very, very afraid of losing her job. And there were so many stresses going on with her job that it sort of exacerbated her symptoms and she had no one to talk to.

Jacqui Chew: [00:05:16] And her situation is really very common. It’s still really difficult to talk about, say, your depression, or your bipolar disorder, or your recent manic episode, and how it’s affecting your job to your supervisors, your managers, because there’s this fear that, “Oh, my gosh. I don’t want to tell my manager about it, but yet I know I’m not performing to my usual level. And I know I’m going to be evaluated. My quarterly MBOs are coming up.” And all of this just builds and it’s a cumulative effect that just exacerbates all the symptoms of someone with bipolar disorder or depression.

Jacqui Chew: [00:06:09] And it is very common, unfortunately. And it’s quite unfortunate, with COVID and the isolation that we have all had to go through, of being alone, of being locked down, even for those of us who don’t have a chemical brain imbalance, there are many everyday folks who are being diagnosed with clinical depression. So, this sort of thing is more and more common.

Jacqui Chew: [00:06:46] But, unfortunately, the sense of safety that we can talk about it at work, just as we could talk about our blood pressure or our heart condition, or how we’re doing better now because our blood pressure is better, because we’re taking better care of ourselves, we’re exercising, and so on and so forth. We can talk about that but, yet, we still can’t talk about our mental wellness or the lack thereof. And that’s a real issue.

Jacqui Chew: [00:07:14] And that’s what that five percent statistic is all about, is, there is so much misinformation, disinformation, and misconception around mental illness. And workplaces, I don’t believe are doing enough to bring their managers and their supervisors to detect symptoms or signs of distress in an employee, which is unfortunate.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:07:49] Yeah. And, you know, you bring up a good point about kind of leaders doing enough. And when we connected previously, you mentioned that it was important that leaders educate themselves on mental illness. Can you talk a little bit about how that would be helpful in a work environment? And particularly on some of the things that you brought up, like with rising diagnoses from the COVID, working remote last year, how would that education be able to help these leaders to create more of an open environment for their employees?

Jacqui Chew: [00:08:27] That’s a really good question. I think, you know, this pandemic has really created an interesting dynamic, because depression or diagnosis of depression and anxiety is so widespread now that the managers themselves are being diagnosed. And so, not only are the folks who are individual contributors who may have been diagnosed prior to the pandemic, but the managers who may be fine prior to that, but because of the pandemic – depression being one of the effects or anxiety being one of the after effects of the lockdown – they’re being diagnosed.

Jacqui Chew: [00:09:13] I think that it has increased the sensitivity to want to understand. Because when you are a manager and you are all of a sudden diagnosed with something that you do not have to think about or not have to even be basically be educated on, you, all of a sudden, are faced with a whole range of symptoms yourself and you’re getting the treatment protocols and et cetera, et cetera. And I think that makes you more empathetic to folks at the workplace, to the people that you manage, the people on your team.

Jacqui Chew: [00:09:58] And, I mean, perhaps this is rather Pollyanna-ish of me, but I would hope that this would make leaders, managers, supervisors more empathetic and more sensitive to the signs and the symptoms because they themselves are going through treatment. They themselves are wrestling with the many challenges that come their way as someone who had been diagnosed with depression or bipolar disorder or anxiety disorder.

Jacqui Chew: [00:10:29] So, I truly believe that people in that power dynamic who are themselves going through treatment and are being educated because they have to be are going to be leading the way at work in creating a safer workplace, if you would, for these kinds of issues to be discussed. Just as you would discuss teamwork and team collaboration, you think about your work team is your support team for the project. Well, part of that support system could be key members that are understanding the person who is perhaps not having a good day, not having a good week, and being more empathetic and understanding about that.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:11:27] And I suppose with a leader who has their own diagnosis, they can be a lot more open with their team as well, which can create some of that breakdown, some of that vulnerability, or create that environment to be more vulnerable, and allow people to feel like they can be more open and bring things to their leader that maybe they wouldn’t have before because there’s a level of understanding. Would you agree with that?

Jacqui Chew: [00:11:54] Yes. Absolutely. There’s a heightened awareness, I believe, because more and more people are getting their diagnosis. They’re being diagnosed. And so, that is, certainly, I think, raising the level of conversation around mental illness.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:12:13] So, you also shared in that previous conversation that we had that it was important that a leader not assume that every person with a mood disorder is going to have the same cognitive disability. Can you talk through the impacts that that could have if an employer just assumed that it was like a one size fits all with the diagnosis and why they should be looking at it more kind of on an individual basis?

Jacqui Chew: [00:12:39] Certainly. So, it’s not a project, but we actually know more about space and getting into space or extra space than we know about the way the brain works, unfortunately. Two people could be diagnosed with bipolar disorder – there are two versions, bipolar 1 and bipolar 2. And they could both be diagnosed with bipolar disorder 2, but they could exhibit very, very different symptoms. And the severity could be very, very different as well.

Jacqui Chew: [00:13:29] So, for myself, I am the bipolar 1, that is my diagnosis. But, generally, I’m really high performing. I can perform at a very high level so long as I get my sleep and I am eating well and exercising, I am fine. But then, there are others who have a really tough time managing the symptoms, even with the exercise and the diet and the sleep. And so, it affects people very differently. And, once again, I’m not a doctor, but I do know that this is a chemical imbalance in the brain that causes at least bipolar disorder. And it affects people very differently because everyone’s physiology is just a little different.

Jacqui Chew: [00:14:31] And so, for a manager to assume that, say, if two people on their team have, say, anxiety disorders or depression, that they are going to be the same way, they’re going to have the same symptoms, and such, would just be, really, sort of a bad assumption. And it could lead to very inaccurate type of assessment of a person’s performance, or a person’s behavior, or attitude, or things like that.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:15:07] And we’re talking a lot about, you know, creating that open dialogue and showing that empathy to employees who may have a mental health diagnosis. There’s going to be probably some listeners going, “Yeah. But we can’t ask those questions. We’ve got regulations we have to follow. There’s certain H.R. rules that are applied here. We can’t discuss their medical condition.” So, from your perspective, how can a leader show support for their employee that has been open about their mental illness without violating those H.R. rules and regulations so that they can show that empathy, create that open environment, but do so in a way where they’re not putting that employer at risk?

Jacqui Chew: [00:15:53] Sure. That’s always a tricky scenario. As a manager, what I had done is, when someone is struggling, say, at work, just as a rule of thumb, regardless of their diagnosis, regardless of whether they’ve been diagnosed or they’ve disclosed, I basically say, “Hey, it seems like you’re really having a tough day. How about taking a long weekend?” So, sometimes just being human and being empathetic to someone who’s clearly having a tough day or a tough week, and we all have those regardless of whether we’ve been diagnosed or not. Just letting them know that they’re allowed, that they can take a day off, take a weekend, take a long weekend.

Jacqui Chew: [00:16:59] The other thing is, you know, most companies – the companies that I’ve been a part of – have as part of the healthcare benefits, employees have access to talk therapies as part of the package. And so, for instance, if someone has disclosed that they’ve just lost a close family member, it’s really, really common for someone with a traumatic life experience to experience clinical depression, I mean, that is a trigger or a known trigger. And so, for something like that, I mean, there’s no H.R. rule – you wouldn’t be violating any rule to say, “Hey, we have available this particular benefit. And I just want to make sure that you are aware that it’s available to you should you need it.” And that is a caring and a responsible thing for a leader or a manager to do.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:18:11] And that also is a great way to show that empathy and that support. And through education and understanding, what might be a trigger for that employee helps you to be able to spot that when you need to pull some of those other approaches that could be helpful in that moment without bringing up the actual diagnosis. That’s great feedback and approaches to use.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:18:37] So, looking at your career, what is something that you would say you were just most proud of within your career overall?

Jacqui Chew: [00:18:48] Gosh. Well, apart from the obvious, since I work with startups, it’s always fantastic when the startups that I work with thrive – more than survive but thrive – and they grow and they scale. But, actually, this might sound a little strange, but I am most proud of feeling empowered and strong enough to fire asshole clients. I have no asshole rule – and I’m not sure if I’m supposed to say that on a podcast, but I’m sure y’all can bleep that out.

Jacqui Chew: [00:19:32] But I think drawing boundaries, and having boundaries, and learning to identify as someone with a bipolar disorder diagnosis, working with all kinds of personalities is a trigger. Certain kinds of behaviors are triggers. And certain kinds of situations that these types of personalities tend to create are stressors. And over time, they can bring on some very, very severe episodes for me. And I had that happen. And so, I have essentially a no asshole rule. Whereby, there are certain types of personalities that I will not work with. And if a client exhibits those behaviors and continues to exhibit those behaviors, despite my conversation with them, I just won’t work with them anymore. And I see it as self-preservation.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:20:45] And it probably took you a little bit to get there, but I could see where that could be a really proud moment for yourself to have that empowerment and strength to be able to say what you’re willing to put up with or put yourself through. So, great example. So, if our listeners wanted to connect with you, what is the best way for them to do that?

Jacqui Chew: [00:21:10] So, you can reach me at jacquichew.com, that’s an easy way. And I have started a community driven organization called Brain Babel, B-A-B-E-L. It’s in its infancy. So, I’m on Instagram as Brain Babel, so that is where I’ll be sharing tips and I’ll be sharing the latest research and trends sort of demystified and in layman’s terms for caregivers as well as folks who are dealing with mental illness, and as well as parents who are taking care of children who’ve been diagnosed with a variety of mood disorders.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:22:04] Great. So, we’re now going to move to our next Workplace MVP, so joining us is Colton Mulligan. He’s the CEO of FoxFuel Creative. Colton, can you share a little background with us in how you came to be the CEO of FoxFuel?

Colton Mulligan: [00:22:22] Sure thing. In 2014, I was working at another agency with two people that had basically become my best friends. We looked around and realized there was an opportunity to leave the agency because we were the ones effectively managing half of the agency on the creative services marketing side. So, we went to the owners of the business and we want to buy out our non-compete contracts, start our own agency, and ask some clients to go with us. They said okay, and threw out a number that was way more than the three of us had. So, I took a second mortgage out of my house. I cleaned out my investments. I borrowed money from my grandmother, doctor friend, and dad, and the partners all scraped money together.

Colton Mulligan: [00:23:06] And so, we bought out our contracts, and on January 1st, 2015, we started FoxFuel Creative in my basement. And, yeah, that was the beginning of it. So, I was the CEO and I had two business partners that manage the digital side and then also the creative side of the business. And that same month, I was diagnosed with type 1 bipolar disorder.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:23:27] Was it difficult to get that diagnosis in that first month? Or did it answer questions? Or how did you feel in that moment?

Colton Mulligan: [00:23:41] I mean, it definitely answered a lot of questions. And kind of in my little story there, I skipped past a lot of the events of 2014 that led me to that point. But, yeah, I think it was relieving. Almost exactly one year prior, I’d been diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder, ADHD, and major depressive disorder. Bipolar is commonly misdiagnosed in the first or second pass. So, it was definitely relieving.

Colton Mulligan: [00:24:06] It was a fun dinner with my two partners when I was like, “Hey, update. I know we just formed an LLC and bought a whole bunch of money and we’re starting this new thing. Update, I’ve got bipolar disorder.” I mean, my two business partners, unbelievably supportive, said, “Hey, you know, understanding the symptoms kind of tracks out with your manic energy and all that stuff.” I was pretty good at hiding the downside. But it’s damn near impossible to hide the upside, the energy, just all the passion that comes with that.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:24:36] And it’s great that they took it very much with open arms and probably helped to answer some questions that they had as well. And just love that support that they provided to you from the story that you’ve told me or that I have seen on some of the documentaries that you’ve done. So, from your perspective, why do so many employees still lack a feeling of psychological safety in their work environment?

Colton Mulligan: [00:25:03] I think it’s probably a couple of factors. Thing one, is probably, like, it’s just awkward for most people. And, you know, we’re not a super corporate environment. But thing two, I would assume that there’s all these gray areas within ADA compliance and H.R. regulations and, “Oh, no. Once they disclosed, is there a whole bunch of new protocols I have to have?” So, I would almost say there’s one, like, the lack of clarity for a lot of professionals in the H.R. space what you’re supposed to do.

Colton Mulligan: [00:25:33] And then, there’s also, like, the personal side of it. It’s just, you know, among just humans in general, it’s a weighty thing a lot of folks just aren’t prepared for. Like, how do I go through that conversation saying something beyond, “Oh, I’m so sorry. Let me know how I can help and I’ll pray for you.” Outside of those two things, most people are just like, “I don’t know what to say.”

Jamie Gassmann: [00:25:55] So, if you were in that situation, like, what would you have them say? From your perspective, like with your two partners, if you could have the ideal response from somebody, what would that sound like?

Colton Mulligan: [00:26:15] I mean, that’s an interesting question and it’s one that I get asked commonly. Like, I wind up doing a lot of coffees and meet ups with folks where they just ask, “Hey, my brother got diagnosed, or I have this employee, or whatever, what should I do?” And there’s an odd way to say it, which is like, if you don’t have a framework or sandbox or an ongoing conversation/relationship with that person where you have regular check ins on headspace or a depth in your relationship, you’re kind of behind the eight ball on that. So, you can start fostering that.

Colton Mulligan: [00:26:49] But like with our employees, I’m in a comfortable space, like, I’ve had employees disclose to me, “Hey, Colton. I want to let you know I’m trying a new antidepressant.” “Hey, I’m going back to my therapist. I haven’t seen him in three years, but I’m going through some stuff personally, et cetera.” Fortunately, we already have a regular cadence and rhythm where as part of our check ins on their career goals and stuff like that. There’s space where they go, “I just want to know, like as you enter this week -” it’s like Monday, Tuesday “- what’s your headspace? Are you a five? Are you an eight? What’s going on?” And that provides the employee the space where like I’m not saying, “Hey, do you have a recent mental health diagnosis? Quick question. Just wanted to throw that out there.”

Colton Mulligan: [00:27:26] But it gives them the opportunity to share what they want, and they don’t have to. I can read between the lines. But I know, hey, there are five this week and that gives me space to I don’t have to ask personal questions, but I can say, “Hey, what do you need from me?” Rather than saying, “Hey, let me know if you need anything.” That’s a really crap answer. A really great answer is, “What do you need from me? Can I be like a support and kind of a listening ear right now? Do you want to talk through some of your brain space? And maybe I can help sort priorities and share from my own experience. Hey, I know when I’m overwhelmed. Or if I feel anxious or if I do whatever, I know and I just speak from personal experience.”

Colton Mulligan: [00:28:04] Sometimes if I just talk through what I got to do the day or this week, I can kind of figure out what’s important and what I should focus on, you know. And, normally, I can try and share in that way. It’s not always perfect. But for me, personally, I love it when somebody gives me the options, “Do you need advice right now? I’m happy to help. But likewise, I can be a sounding board.” Or, “Let’s just sort through what you got going on.” I love that.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:28:26] Yeah. A little bit more, probably, natural feeling and kind of true response in that regard as opposed to just kind of, “Oh, can I help you with something or let me know?” I think it’s probably like a default maybe that they don’t know what to say, so they go to that.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:28:43] So, at FoxFuel – and you were kind of getting to this, too – you have a great approach to ensuring that your employees feel psychologically safe. Can you share how you have created a culture that welcomes vulnerability and openness? And I know you kind of touched on it a little bit, but you have, like, a specific meeting that you’re doing with your team and individuals each week and doing different approaches. So, can you kind of dive into that a little bit and share kind of some of those approaches that you’ve done?

Colton Mulligan: [00:29:13] One hundred percent. I just feel the need to disclose upfront, I am not an H.R. professional. And don’t get me wrong, there are probably past employees or people, like, “Colton was terrible at this. I can’t believe you’re talking about culture.” I like to think that over time we’ve cultivated, it’s by no means perfect.

Colton Mulligan: [00:29:29] But at least I feel better when I explain this by talking about the fact that we’ve been around seven years, and in year four, maybe five, our longest running employee that have been with us from the beginning, like, we were on a road trip and we were talking about something that came up. She was like, “You’re a really crap manager.” And she was great. She was just like, “I’ve been looking for a mentor and I had all the stuff. And you were clear that you don’t like to micromanage or manage. You just want to lead, which was great for a while, but like, we need more.”

Colton Mulligan: [00:29:57] And so, then from that, we went to StrengthsFinder conferences and I read The One Minute Manager and It’s The Manager from StrengthsFinder and Gallup and all them. And we went to emotional intelligence workshops and we had a consultant come through, so all of that. And then, I would find the threads that I noticed a lot of different areas picked up on. And one of those was a very personal check in that went hand in hand with the other times you check in with employees.

Colton Mulligan: [00:30:26] And so, as part of that, a regular cadence we have now that, at least, I think it bears fruit. Every Tuesday with my team, we manage accounts and we would normally say, “Hey, what are you looking at this week? What do you need to prioritize, like professional things?” And then, there’s always a question in there that said, “Hey, you know, how ever much you want to share with your headspace, what’s going on with you now?” And that has created a space that has helped me, I like to think, as a manager because someone can say, “I had a really rough conversation with my mom this weekend and I do not feel real confident just being honest going into this week.”

Colton Mulligan: [00:31:02] And that would let me take pause throughout the week if we left a client meeting, or there was feedback I had to share, or I realized, “Man, this person needs a win.” And I’m not always great about praising folks. And so, that would always give me a prompt, it’s like, “This week I’ve got to look for something to let a Cathy or a Lauren, you know, let them really feel accomplished and celebrated by the team.” I’m making up these names real quick because I want to scrub it. So, we’ve never employed a Cathy, but I’m just throwing these things out there.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:31:32] And I love your share of that, which is why I brought it up, because I think you touched on a little bit of what Jacqui was sharing earlier in the show about the human side of that employee leader relationship. You know, you’re really getting to know those employees at a level that they feel comfortable being able to come to you with what they might be going through and vice versa. You’re able to pick up on maybe some of those cues. I think it was just such a great example of just a tactic that’s clearly worked for you in your leadership style.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:32:06] And so, we talked a little bit about the focus internally on supporting employee wellbeing and trying to, you know, be aware of when they might need that when or when they might need that little bit of extra support. You also shared an example where FoxFuel helped its clients to do the same, I think it was regarding over the last year with COVID. Can you share that example with the audience about what you did and kind of some of the unique approaches that you took that kind of bared fruit for them?

Colton Mulligan: [00:32:43] We have a healthcare client across, basically, 22 counties. They’ve got 10,000 or 11,000 employees. They’ve got ten hospitals. And when COVID hit, you can imagine how slammed all these hospitals were. You’re terrified. You have no idea how deadly this disease is. Yet they’ve got to show up to work. They’ve got to wear all this new equipment. There are pieces of their facility that are locked down and taped over with plaster. It was terrifying. And on top of that, you have a staffing shortage, and those that are showing up are overworked, they’re working a long time. Like, you want to talk about an incredibly negative impact on culture. And then, you know, with the economy tanks and people are then worried about their jobs. And this company did so much to try and help.

Colton Mulligan: [00:33:36] So, during that time, what was great, we’d spun up a video series because a lot of these employees don’t check email, et cetera. But we tried to make a really accessible way where every week we would release one of two kinds of videos. One, a video from leadership. So, from the CEO that was looking and speaking directly to all of his employees, not with, like, platitudes, but just saying, “I appreciate you. I appreciate the effort that you’re putting in.” And we would get him on the video to name specific things, “I know at home, you’re dealing with kids trying to do, you know, virtual learning. And I know that it’s scary.” And I think he was just very honest in just saying, “I appreciate so much what you’re doing in the impact on patients.”

Colton Mulligan: [00:34:27] So, we did that and we would produce these videos, put them out via email, put them on Facebook, all that stuff. And then, likewise, just inspiring stories. So, we would come through and don all the PPE equipment. And I would interview folks off camera and we would try to highlight the inspiring stories of what was going on. So, folks of, like, excellent care that was happening, people that had best friends on their team that they still got to show up to work with. So, I don’t like to think that it was silver lining everything. It was just reminders of what you do matters and hearing from leadership that I appreciate what you’re doing and what you’re going through.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:35:03] Yeah. It’s a great example. And sometimes those little reminders can go such a long way. So, in your opinion, what are some ways that organizations can better connect with their employees? And are there some out of the box or alternative approaches you feel can make a difference in helping to better connect with employees? Because you mentioned email, that is tough, I think, in any organization. If you think of the mass amount of email that most employees get, you know, there’s got to be different approaches that a leader can consider when trying to get important communication. Like, “Here’s where support is accessible to you.” Or, you know, “Here’s a quick update on how this person did this really well.” But just that other ways of being able to connect.

Colton Mulligan: [00:35:49] People connect via story, that’s something true long before companies and technology and all the stuff, right? And that’s what FoxFuel tries to lean into with our clients or whatever. Hey, there’s email, but, now more than ever with our clients, I try to focus on the fact that story is your driver. And whether you are trying to get your employee to feel something or your prospect or client or whatever it is, I now don’t think of email or Facebook or anything as the solution. I think of it is like the medium or the conduit where you can take these stories. So, whether they’re written stories or whatever, and we’re pushing video just because it’s accessible. By and large in any community you’re in now, you got your phone, you’re surrounded by screens.

Colton Mulligan: [00:36:33] So, if you can move to video, you can tell someone a story that will actually move them with everything that you can do there in two to three minutes versus a five page blog. And it’s very accessible. And like what you guys are doing here with podcasts and stuff, making it accessible where it doesn’t interrupt their day. So, that’s thing one that I would say things that folks can do.

Colton Mulligan: [00:36:55] And then, the second thing is a much longer burn, but it’s just investing, I think, in the management styles of your folks. The leaders are the ones that really hold the power at signaling what is psychologically safe. And so, for me, I like to think that our team feels more comfortable when they hear me say, “It’s a five. And I’m not going to go into it, but, you know, I had this fight or this incident.” Or, “I had this thing.” Or, “I’m low energy this week.” And things like that signal that it’s A-OK for you to share the same, thing one, encouraging folks to do that.

Colton Mulligan: [00:37:33] And then, thing two, is just equipping everybody with common language, I think. So, we’ve used all kinds of stuff. But, you know, the common language that we’ve used is things like radical candor or letting people use an Enneagram or StrengthFinder or Myers-Briggs. All of that just gives people common language where they can admit, “Hey, one of my strengths is not presenting. One of my strengths is not working in data.” And then, it gives people some more psychological safety that they can own what they’re bad at and then share that with a manager, so they don’t have to pretend to be a jack of all trades without a weakness. And displaying and naming weakness is like the definition of vulnerability, which creates psychological safety.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:38:20] Great. And so, similar to what I asked Jacqui, what is something that when you look at your career, what are you most proud of?

Colton Mulligan: [00:38:34] I’ll try to rattle off because Jacqui gave a great answer and I loved it. And so, I didn’t want to, like, say, “Yeah. Me too.” But to go through some real quick because I’m trying to think about this, but we just had most recently a recent thing, like, we had an employee that just left because, you know, she’s ready for the next chapter in her career and we’re excited for her. And when she left, she cried in telling clients in meetings about it. She cried in her exit interview and all that stuff. Because what she wants to do professionally is great and managing teams like that. Like, FoxFuel kind of has an intentional angle to stay a small entrepreneurial group of 9, 10, 11 folks.

Colton Mulligan: [00:39:14] But what was great was in the exit interview and some words that we exchanged via email, et cetera, she talked about she went through a rough time in her life and she said, “I came in and I am leaving FoxFuel an entirely different person, how confident I am, my approach to life, my approach to relationships, standing up for myself.” To me, there’s a lot of stuff you can look back.

Colton Mulligan: [00:39:34] But when I think about the kinds of impact that we have on folks, I like the idea that people won’t say, “Oh, yeah. I was an AE at FoxFuel and then I did this.” But on the inside, I love to think that we have folks come through our doors that may be with us for a couple of years or however long – you know, don’t get me wrong, you got your ups and downs. And I’m far from a perfect manager. I’m probably a crap manager on some days – that someone that leaves overall and says, “Man, it was a time where I felt supported and I grew personally in that time,” that means the world to me.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:40:08] That’s a great example. It’s always great that you know that you had that positive mark on somebody’s life and career. So, if our listeners wanted to connect with you, what’s the best way for them to do that?

Colton Mulligan: [00:40:20] You can email me, colton@foxfuelcreative.com, or hit me up on LinkedIn, or whatever. Or if you go to our website, foxfuelcreative.com, there’s a thing that’s going to pop up and say, “Hey, quit snooping. Grab drinks with Colton,” or something like that. So, yeah, any of those.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:40:35] Great. So, now, we’re going to hear a word from our sponsor. Workplace MVP is sponsored by R3 Continuum. R3 Continuum is a global leader in providing expert, reliable, responsive, and tailored behavioral health crisis and security solutions to promote workplace wellbeing and performance in the face of an ever changing and often unpredictable world. Learn more about how R3 Continuum can tailor a solution for your organization’s unique challenges by visiting our r3c.com today.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:41:06] So, now, I’m going to bring both of our MVP’s together and ask some questions to the both of you. So, the first question is, how can leaders create a work environment that is psychologically safe? Now, I know you both have touched on a few different components of that. But if there was one particular way, what would you say? And let’s go ahead and start with you, Colton.

Colton Mulligan: [00:41:31] I’d go back to what I said before, hands down, leaders can find spaces to (A) make it clear that they can share their vulnerabilities and share their headspace. And then, (2) create the regular rhythm of an ongoing conversation. Not like, “Hey, can I check in on your mental health diagnosis.” But instead, “Hey, can you share with me, like, what’s your headspace like this week? How confident do you feel? I’d love to talk about that to see how I can support you.”

Jamie Gassmann: [00:41:58] Perfect. And how about you, Jacqui?

Jacqui Chew: [00:42:00] Sure. There are, believe it or not, H.R. modules now, where – and I’m forgetting the name of it, gosh – basically, it incorporates this sentiment aspect of performance of work, sort of a touch base, if you would. And so, I agree with Colton this idea of a cadence, so that if you’ve established a cadence of meetings where the discussion is around the work as well as sentiment, so, how are you feeling, how are you feeling about work, about your work, it’s more accessible than, to Colton’s point, “how’s your mental health”.

Jacqui Chew: [00:42:56] And so, there are actually sort of like – gosh, I forget. Gosh. I was actually a part of an organization that had this that was quite interesting because it was a weekly check in. And as a manager, we check in with each member of my team every week where, as part, they would complete a module or web module that basically says what their five priorities were or their four priorities were for the week, how they felt about themselves and their priorities. And then, we would talk about it.

Jacqui Chew: [00:43:37] So, there was this confluence of the work as well as the self. And I thought that was really helpful and useful to them because, say, if they had a bad week, they could talk about it from the perspective of these were things that I didn’t think that I felt that I did very well at all. I had a couple of nights where my baby was crying or kept me up all night or whatever. So, it just allowed for more human conversation to happen in a corporate environment.

Jacqui Chew: [00:44:19] Now, Colton, your wonderful because you have a workplace that is accessible, it’s friendly, it’s safe. In a large organization of even 50 or 100 people, when you start having department heads and when there is a talent organization, when there’s an employee handbook – that’s basically my litmus test. When a company has an employee handbook, then, I think, that managing and leading becomes a little less human and a little more robotic. But it doesn’t have to be so. And I think and I hope that we will, as a workplace, as businesses, be more like yours, Colton, than the large sort of thousand person corporations that are out there.

Colton Mulligan: [00:45:22] Thank you very much. That’s very sweet. I don’t know that all my employees would say that, but I like to think so. So, that’s great.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:45:31] So, looking at these employers and kind of to your point, it’s almost like what you’re saying, Jacqui, when the employer gets a little bit bigger, they almost have to be more intentional about making that a cultural priority with their organization. As opposed to, you know, like it has to be kind of embedded in their handbook of how they’re going to approach that.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:45:53] So, if you were looking at employers, what do you want them to know when it comes to mental health with their employees? Like, what would be kind of, you know, the message you would want them to be aware of? If they haven’t educated themselves, if they’re being told by an employee they have this diagnosis, what message would you send to them?

Jacqui Chew: [00:46:15] Gosh. Be less afraid of litigation and more concerned about the person. I didn’t mean to rhyme, that was not intentional. But large companies, they’re about risk mitigation. I mean, I hate to say this, but every H.R. department that I’ve come into contact with has been about risk mitigation, and liability, and managing liability. At the end of the day, we are people, we are humans. And if we led and managed by just being human with compassion and empathy, I truly believe that those activities, those behaviors will naturally fall into place. It’s the humane thing to do.

Jacqui Chew: [00:47:15] If you see someone in distress, what do you do? You want to help. What makes being at the workplace any different? Well, it’s the fear of a lawsuit. So, I truly believe that if corporations can slowly retreat from this fear of litigation mindset and more of a compassion mindset of a positive versus subtractive mindset, I think we we will see more healthy workplaces. We will see healthier employees all around.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:47:55] How about you, Colton?

Colton Mulligan: [00:47:58] I’d lean into one of the things that Jacqui said, I would say a very clear and intentional investment into emotional intelligence, that umbrella. She used the word empathy, which, to me, is the largest thing more than finding just the right curriculum or mental health check in, et cetera. Investing in that at the individual level is the ongoing effort to keep finding the resources and things and spot the small elements.

Colton Mulligan: [00:48:24] To give an example, I spun up a small group that I ran for seven years on mental health where folks would get together. And there were ridiculous things I realized now that H.R. was rolling out all these wellness programs and things. And I realized that for those with eating disorders, all of the wellness campaigns right now that healthcare companies push that do weight loss challenges and stuff, are ridiculously triggering. Where you manage as a team, and you’re losing weight and pounds, and the language, and the things that are celebrated, there’s no real clear curriculum that would do that. That’s a checklist.

Colton Mulligan: [00:48:56] The biggest thing is if you invest in emotional intelligence, your team and your folks, it’s the ability to dynamically look at things in an ongoing way and exercise a greater degree of empathy, which, to me, is the solve more so than a book everybody reads together, whatever. It’s a continual emotional intelligence improvement.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:49:16] Those are both great points. I hadn’t even thought about that with the weight loss challenge, and you see that quite often, especially after The Biggest Loser came out. The biggest loser challenge is everywhere. That’s very interesting.

Jacqui Chew: [00:49:27] Sorry, Jamie. I do want to add – I completely forgot and they’re so important – there’s another whole group of people or population, they would be Founders of Color. So, startup Founders of Color faced a whole new layer of stressors, especially when they are raising funds. There was trauma for Founders of Color when they’re raising funds. This may not be the case this year or the last, maybe, two years, but I can tell you, so we have a startup circle, sort of a wellness circle where founders – primarily Founders of Color – would come together to talk about more of their personal and health issues.

Jacqui Chew: [00:50:26] But what services often is, it’s the microaggressions that happen on a daily basis when they’re raising funds from primarily non-person-of-color venture capitalists. And the questions are different, the tone is different, the assumptions that these venture capitalists make are different.

Jacqui Chew: [00:51:03] I’ll give you an example. There is this now prominent African-American female founder of a startup that also has a social group, social good sort of mission. And one of her investors actually said to her thinking that he was being so nice, he said, “Wow. I’m really glad I listened to my wife who suggested that I invested in your startup to ensure that we were being inclusive. I’m so glad that your startup is doing so well and I just wasn’t expecting the return.” I’m paraphrasing. But that is the microaggression and it caused her to doubt herself. Like, “Did my startup get funded because it was a good idea and we have a strong team and there’s a business here? Or did we get funded because I’m Black?” And so, that’s the good story.

Jacqui Chew: [00:52:19] But the bad story, this happened at TechCrunch. TechCrunch, they used to have twice a year this huge confab where they would have a startup alley of sorts. And the founders, a whole bunch of Black founders that I know of who’s ever been to those wherein the investors were primarily non-African-American, non-persons-of-color would actually physically avoid the booths of this Founders of Color. And there’s no reason for this, except for it is pure discrimination and this is what they have to deal with.

Jacqui Chew: [00:53:08] So, we, in these conversations in the support circles – we call them – I mean, these are the additional stressors that Founders of Color go through that are quite different. And to exacerbate the issue there, the percentage of psychologists/psychiatrists who look like them, a very small percentage, which is difficult as well. So, that is one of those little known challenges and issues that still plague sort of the mental health specter and category.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:53:49] So, it sounds like there could be a lot of different kind of triggering events and different things that might lead to some of those mental health concerns in all varieties of different businesses, whether startup or – it’s a very interesting point.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:54:04] So, if you were going to leave one advice on the table for a leader who’s listened to this podcast that you want them to just take with them – and if they do something with it, fantastic – but if there’s just one thing that you could leave that would help to make a difference in their work environment – and we’ll start with Colton – what would that be? What would that one piece of advice that you want to leave to that leader?

Colton Mulligan: [00:54:30] No pressure, right? What’s the one way to improve mental health in your thousand person organization? I am torn between, like, the one that’s really tactical and easy is, just go create your cost center line item, whatever for emotional intelligence training, is thing one. The other thing that’s harder is, just the idea of encouraging vulnerability between your leaders and those that they’re supporting.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:55:02] Great. And how about you, Jacqui, if there was one piece of advice?

Jacqui Chew: [00:55:06] Sure. It was a thing that I had my husband do. So, I figured if it’s good enough for him, it’s good enough for the rest of us. Pick up Mental Health for Dummies, the book. Get educated.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:55:23] Yeah. Get educated. I love it. So, thank you both for being on the show, for sharing your personal experiences, sharing approaches you’ve used, your expertise around this topic, and for letting us celebrate you by being on the show. And we really appreciate the advice and suggestions you left the listeners. We appreciate you, and I’m sure your organizations, and staff, and co-workers, and friends, and everyone else involved into your lives do, too.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:55:55] We also want to thank our show sponsor, R3 Continuum, for supporting the Workplace MVP podcast. And to our listeners, thank you for tuning in. If you’ve not already done so, make sure to subscribe so you get our most recent episodes and other resources. You can also follow our show on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter at Workplace MVP. If you are a workplace MVP or know someone who is, we want to know, email us at info@workplace-mvp.com. Thank you all for joining us and have a great rest of your day.

 

Tagged With: Bipolar disorder, Brain Babel, Colton Mulligan, FoxFuel Creative, iFusion, jacqui chew, Jamie Gassmann, mental health, Nashville, R3 Continuum, TEDxAtlanta, workplace mental health, Workplace MVP

Workplace MVP: Dr. George Vergolias, R3 Continuum

June 10, 2021 by John Ray

Dr. George Vergolias
Minneapolis St. Paul Studio
Workplace MVP: Dr. George Vergolias, R3 Continuum
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Dr. George Vergolias

Workplace MVP: Dr. George Vergolias, Medical Director, R3 Continuum

Dr. George Vergolias joined host Jamie Gassmann on this edition of Workplace MVP to share his career journey, what he’s learned in working with hospital nurses, doctors, and other staff, pandemic-related behavioral shifts in other industries, the psychology of an active shooter, and much more. You’ll definitely want to listen to this episode if you’d like a better understanding of what healthcare professionals, especially those in emergency and urgent triage situations, have been dealing with over the past year and a half. Workplace MVP is underwritten and presented by R3 Continuum and produced by the Minneapolis-St.Paul Studio of Business RadioX®.

Dr. George Vergolias, Vice President and Medical Director, R3 Continuum

Dr. George Vergolias
Dr. George Vergolias, Medical Director, R3 Continuum

George Vergolias, PsyD, LP is a forensic psychologist and threat management expert serving as Vice President and Medical Director for the R3 Continuum. As part of his role of Vice President and Medical Director of R3 Continuum, he leads their Threat of violence and workplace violence programs. Dr. Vergolias is also the founder and President of TelePsych Supports, a tele-mental health company providing involuntary commitment and crisis risk evaluations for hospitals and emergency departments. He has over 20 years of forensic experience with expertise in the following areas: violence risk and threat management, psychological dynamics of stalking, sexual offending, emotional trauma, civil and involuntary commitment, suicide and self-harm, occupational disability, law enforcement consultation, expert witness testimony, and tele-mental health. Dr. Vergolias has directly assessed or managed over one thousand cases related to elevated risk for violence or self-harm, sexual assault, stalking, and communicated threats. He has consulted with regional, state, and federal law enforcement agencies, including the FBI, Secret Service, and Bureau of Prisons. He has worked for and consulted with Fortune 500 companies, major insurance carriers, government agencies, and large healthcare systems on issues related to work absence management, workplace violence, medical necessity reviews, and expert witness consultation.

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R3 Continuum

R3 Continuum is a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. R3c helps ensure the psychological and physical safety of organizations and their people in today’s ever-changing and often unpredictable world. Through their continuum of tailored solutions, including evaluations, crisis response, executive optimization, protective services, and more, they help organizations maintain and cultivate a workplace of wellbeing so that their people can thrive. Learn more about R3c at www.r3c.com.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

About Workplace MVP

Every day, around the world, organizations of all sizes face disruptive events and situations. Within those workplaces are everyday heroes in human resources, risk management, security, business continuity, and the C-suite. They don’t call themselves heroes though. On the contrary, they simply show up every day, laboring for the well-being of employees in their care, readying the workplace for and planning responses to disruption. This show, Workplace MVP, confers on these heroes the designation they deserve, Workplace MVP (Most Valuable Professionals), and gives them the forum to tell their story. As you hear their experiences, you will learn first-hand, real life approaches to readying the workplace, responses to crisis situations, and overcoming challenges of disruption. Visit our show archive here.

Workplace MVP Host Jamie Gassmann

In addition to serving as the host to the Workplace MVP podcast, Jamie Gassmann is the Director of Marketing at R3 Continuum (R3c). Collectively, she has more than fourteen years of marketing experience. Across her tenure, she has experience working in and with various industries including banking, real estate, retail, crisis management, insurance, business continuity, and more. She holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mass Communications with special interest in Advertising and Public Relations and a Master of Business Administration from Paseka School of Business, Minnesota State University.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:06] Broadcasting from the Business RadioX Studios, it’s time for Workplace MVP. Workplace MVP is brought to you by R3 Continuum, a global leader in workplace behavioral health, crisis, and security solutions. Now, here’s your host, Jamie Gassmann.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:27] Hello, everyone. Your host, Jamie Gassmann here. And welcome to this edition of Workplace MVP. Work environments are still experiencing residual shifts and turns as they continue to work towards the next normal. Some workplaces are in the process of bringing employees back to the office after a prolonged time working remote. Others are experiencing an increase in workplace violence. And, collectively, there is a heightened awareness and responsibility of employee mental health.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:59] There’s so much that organizational leadership needs to consider and be aware of in today’s current work environment. It begs the question, where do you begin with navigating this environment of constant change? And how do you make sure your people remain protected and supported through it all?

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:16] With us today to help provide the answers to those questions and more is Workplace MVP, Dr. George Vergolias, Medical Director for our show sponsor, R3 Continuum, and Chief Clinical Officer for TelePsych Supports. Welcome to the show, Dr. Vergolias.

George Vergolias: [00:01:33] Thank you, Jamie. It’s a pleasure to be here.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:35] So, let’s just start off with you telling me a little bit about yourself and your career journey.

George Vergolias: [00:01:41] Certainly. My career journey was really a bit haphazard. I admire people that have a North Star in their career, and they pursue that, and they just hit those goals. Mine, I certainly had goals, but other opportunities came up that diverted. I actually went to undergrad at Marquette University for engineering. And about a year into it, I took a class called Differential Equations as well as Organic Chemistry, and it completely kicked my butt, and I decided that is not the route I wanted to go.

George Vergolias: [00:02:11] I then pivoted to philosophy for about a year, Eastern Philosophy, and then realized that I wouldn’t have a job when I get out of school. And that was a natural extension into psychology, understanding the human brain, what makes people think the way they do and act the way they do. And I continued on that trajectory, got into a doctoral program at the Chicago School, and actually had a neuropsych track, neuropsychology, and actually finished. And I did a neuropsychology and an inpatient rotation at Duke. And I graduated and I couldn’t find a job.

George Vergolias: [00:02:50] And I was a bit frustrated. And an old mentor of mine called and said, “Hey, would you be interested in doing a postdoc at Notre Dame in forensic psychology?” And I’ve taken one class before, but I was interested generally. And I jumped on it and I fell in love. I fell in love with it.

George Vergolias: [00:03:06] And so, what happened from there is I began working in the forensic field, both in a private practice setting, consulting with courts, jails, prisons, and working with county mental health systems. And I did that for about ten years. And in that process, I began consulting with law enforcement and emergency departments around imminent risk, suicide risk, homicide risk, people that were psychotic and paranoid. And that also, at one point, brought me into the workplace violence sector. Because when you’re a threat on violence in the community, you also have some expertise and a whole range of violence risks.

George Vergolias: [00:03:43] And so, at that point, my career took two trajectories. I started consulting with EAPs and, eventually, joined R3 Continuum about ten years ago. And at the same time, my work with the emergency departments as an individual ballooned into developing a practice and then a company that staffs emergency departments with doctoral psychologists and forensic psychologists to do imminent risk, involuntary commitment, and other types of crisis assessments. And some 20 years later, here I am. So, that’s a general view of that trajectory.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:04:17] Great. And so, through TelePsych Supports you work within regional emergency departments in hospitals. So, tell me what are some of the common challenges that you have seen surface over this last year?

George Vergolias: [00:04:31] That’s a great question, because there have been many. So, what happened is when COVID hit or the pandemic hit, and it really started gaining traction in terms of awareness of the seriousness of it, one of the biggest things that hospitals needed to do – and I live in Raleigh, North Carolina, so we were a little bit fortunate. And that New York State was well ahead, they were the early curve. So, we were able to learn for some of the difficulties that Europe and New York State encountered.

George Vergolias: [00:05:00] The biggest priority was we need to free up beds. And the way we needed to do that is that we needed to maximize getting every behavioral health patient out the door that was able to get out the door. So, unless they were absolutely needing to be in the hospital, we needed to get them out because we needed to free up hospital resources. And that put a lot of pressure on staff in the emergency department, on doctors, on nurses, on the psychologists to really tell a very fine line of deciding who stays and who do we think is safe enough to go out into the community.

George Vergolias: [00:05:34] And there were moments in many hospitals – for a short period of time in ours – where we had to go to what we almost called battle triage, where there would be – you know, in 2019 or in six months from now, even now, if you came into the hospital and said you were suicidal and you had some pretty severe intent and we believed you, there’s no way we would let you leave. There was some windows of time where we simply had nowhere to put you. So, unless you came in and you were literally having acted on it, or cut yourself, or made an attempt to hang yourself, or took pills, we couldn’t keep you.

George Vergolias: [00:06:12] And in a way, it’s analogous to what some of the Vegas hospitals dealt with after the Las Vegas mass shooting involving the Mandalay Bay. There were times where, normally, someone would easily be admitted and acted on quickly with a gunshot wound to the leg. That person became a third priority relative to all the other injuries. So, in behavioral healthy, we had to do that. We had to get into some of that very tough decision making.

George Vergolias: [00:06:41] The other thing that happened is, the community safety net for behavioral health – and what I mean by that is, public sector clinics that take Medicare and Medicaid, nonprofit organizations, both practices and clinics and even partial hospitalization programs, and even individual private practices that were seeing patients that were on the verge of breakdown, all of that markedly slowed down with COVID. People weren’t going into the office. We were all pivoting to telemental health, which for many was helpful. But that’s not helpful for the person that’s having rapid manic episodes every other day.

George Vergolias: [00:07:18] Going to their apartment, engaging them in person, talking them down is a critical component. And when that was all taken away in the early stages of the pandemic, that means that safety net eroded and more and more of those people were starting to come into the emergency departments because they were decompensating and they didn’t have anywhere else to go. So, those were the big things that kind of created a pressure vacuum in those settings.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:07:42] So, what kind of impact did that have on the staff? And has it lingered, you know, as we’ve come in 2021?

George Vergolias: [00:07:51] Yeah. I mean, it had a massive impact in that it was like a two-fold punch. On the one hand, you had medical staff in particular just dealing with COVID. And when you’re talking particularly about emergency department nurses and techs and physicians, that’s difficult because they live in the space where they save lives. That’s what they do for a living. They don’t necessarily bring somebody fully to recovery, but their goal is to stabilize the life, save it, and then move it upstairs to one of the other units.

George Vergolias: [00:08:27] And when COVID hit and they were overrun, and there were people literally sleeping in cots in the hallways – and in some hospital, sleeping on the floor and in the hallways – and putting people on ventilators, they reached the limit of what their medical expertise could do. And all you had to do is wait and see is their body able to fight through with the help of the ventilator, in many cases, and make it through.

George Vergolias: [00:08:51] So, what I found is a bit anecdotal, but what I found is there was a great deal of learned helplessness in emergency department staff, both nursing and physicians. Because they’re used to working in a high stress environment, but with a great deal of control and a great deal of ability within the limits of medical science and practice to save people. But COVID changed that. I mean, there were a lot of times where we’ve done what we can do. Now, we just got to wait for this person’s body to make it through the fight or not – make it through the fight. So, that was one thing that hit.

George Vergolias: [00:09:27] On top of that, what we saw is that influx of severe and persistent mentally ill people coming to the emergency department, which added another layer of difficulty. And it increased hostile interactions. Because you had patients – and I want to be clear, in general, people with mental illness are not more violent than the rest of the community. But people with severe and persistent mental illness, who have command hallucinations, who have paranoia, who have been living on the street, who have comorbid substance abuse disorders, they do have a tendency to be more violent, particularly amidst modes of crisis. And so, what we saw is a spike in those individuals coming in and being agitated, being hostile.

George Vergolias: [00:10:11] In fact, there’s a recent study of nurses and they reported a 20 percent increase of physical violence against them during the pandemic. And this is the group that was already at high risk for exposure to physical and verbal violence. So, those were some of the big things that we saw that was really tough to deal with when you’re working in those environments.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:10:34] Yeah. And looking at the different organizational levels within a hospital, doctors, nurses, maybe nurse managers, and there’s obviously the administration level, there’s this variance in how they handle and respond to certain things like compassion fatigue, burnout, or is there a variance in how they respond to those different areas? Because I can imagine after, you know, this full year of all the kind of emotional rollercoaster that health care staff has been on, you know, is there a variance in how they’re navigating compassion fatigue, burnout, stress, and overall PTSD?

George Vergolias: [00:11:08] I would say there is – I think some of the research supports this as well – certainly in my 20 years of experience in those settings. And what I’ve noticed – and, again, I’m speaking in generalities here because we’re talking in the aggregate. But what we have seen is, for those staff that work on the floors, internal medicine, post-surgery, cardiac, there’s a lot of stressors there, right? They see death. They see suffering. They see grief. For me, one of the toughest floors would be the NICU, the Neonatal Intensive Care Units.

George Vergolias: [00:11:45] But there is a certain amount of stability in those environments. People are admitted, they’re treated, the course of treatment is worked on, and then they’re discharged. The rapid turnaround you see in the ED, the function of an ED, is to get somebody in, stabilize them, and move them out because they need the next bed. Move them up to the floor or move them back into the community. And so, when COVID hit, people cannot easily be moved because there was nowhere to move them to.

George Vergolias: [00:12:14] On top of the fact that hospitals had to do their own self-quarantine. The ED was never a fully quarantined location. Many hospitals put up tents in the parking lot where they would screen people. But moving someone from the ED up to a floor that was COVID-safe or deemed, you know, not at risk, that was a big decision. So, there were often times when people just couldn’t be moved. And that was really tough for ED staff.

George Vergolias: [00:12:41] And so, that rapid turnaround, I think, really impacted ED staff in a way because that’s what they’re used to. That was a little less impactful. I’m not saying impactful. But less impactful for people that were working on floors. That doesn’t mean there weren’t stressors. Because one of the things that people working on floors is they tended to see a lot of death related to COVID, especially at high volume hospitals during the pandemic.

George Vergolias: [00:13:08] The other thing I find is, these roles are self-selective. You know, if I was a counselor that works with – I’m a therapist doing marital therapy – which, by the way, to me is very difficult. I used to do consulting with divorce attorneys. And I quit after, like, two years because that was worse than all the forensic work I’ve done. It’s just tough some of those situations and how ugly people can be. What’s interesting, though, is these roles are self-selective. People pick emergency medicine, forensic psychology, emergency nursing because they have a drive. To me, it’s almost a certain adrenaline. It’s a certain interest. I actually think there’s a predisposition to ADHD because that attention span of moving from one patient to the next, to the next is very well suited.

George Vergolias: [00:14:02] And these are the same people that, to me, are very much like sharks. And I kind of fit this category. We just don’t slow down. We’re always looking for the next challenge. And the problem with not slowing down is, it’s hard to take emotional inventory to how am I doing? How am I coping? Let me do an emotional check in. And I think that’s difficult. Again, I’m not saying that other physicians and nurses don’t experience that, but they select other areas of expertise that doesn’t demand that kind of mindset.

George Vergolias: [00:14:33] And so, when you enter kind of that heightened battle zone, if you will, it’s very hard for emergency physicians, EMS, other types of doctors and nurses in that setting to slow down and do a self-check in. Because there really is a sense of, “I don’t have time for this. Somebody is coding in the next bay, I got to get over there. And when I go home after a 12, or 16, or 20 hour shift, I just want to eat a quick meal and go to sleep, or watch Netflix for an hour and hug my kids. I don’t have time to emotionally process.” So, that is something I’ve noticed that was always there in medicine and psychology, but exacerbated by those stressors I already talked about that impact, particularly that point – what I call the point of the spear – that emergency department setting.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:15:20] Interesting. And you shared when we talked before the show about a scenario that kind of demonstrates that in a way, you know, with an active shooter training drill that you did at a hospital in terms of how the different, you know, maybe roles within the organization responded to that scenario. Can you share a little bit about that? Because it was just so interesting to really kind of have a demonstration of how their thinking is very much reactive. It’s just kind of staying in kind of that mode versus protecting themselves or taking care of themselves. Can you share a little bit about that scenario?

George Vergolias: [00:15:59] Yeah. I’m happy too. And this was fascinating for me as well because I didn’t expect it. I was at least 15 years into my career as a forensic psychologist, and this really surprised me, which it was a pleasant surprise, but very interesting. So, what we did is, we did a full simulation active shooter exercise for a hospital setting. This was about five, six years ago. And we were fortunate that the hospital had just built a new wing that was finished, but they had not moved in yet. So, we were able to run this simulation in a full hospital environment.

George Vergolias: [00:16:33] And we had law enforcement involved. They were using blanks. We did a pre-briefing and a debriefing with all the staff. We had a number of actors acting like assailants and we had a few other actors acting as victims. And then, we had the hospital staff in their normal roles. So, we had a small section of internal medicine, a small section of OBGYN delivering births. And then, certainly, we had an emergency department section and a few other makeshift units.

George Vergolias: [00:17:02] And what was fascinating is, once the exercise took off – by the way, and everyone was educated on the general protocol of the hospital, which was pull people into a room, barricade the room, and then treat them as best you can, or just barricade. Run, hide, fight, run if you can, hide if you can. We really didn’t talk much about fight for this particular organization. And what happened is, where the people came through, the assailants, is we found on all the medical units, that’s exactly what they did. They pulled people in, they barricaded rooms, they hid. And even if there were victims out in the hallway, they would try to triage them until the assailants came nearby, and then they would go hide as they were directed to do.

George Vergolias: [00:17:48] What’s interesting is what we found in the emergency department is those staff never hid. They stayed triaging people out in the open in harm’s way. Now, I’m not judging one physician or nurse against another. No one did. It wasn’t a judgment call. Because the truth is, if you are able to hide, you’re actually probably saving more lives because there’s some evidence to show that the more an assailant can find victims, the more they’re going to keep looking as opposed to turning the gun finally on himself or exiting. So, there is some real logic to run, then hide, then fight.

George Vergolias: [00:18:24] But what’s interesting is what we simply found was the emergency personnel, it just wasn’t in their DNA. It just wasn’t in their DNA to let somebody lie there and not try to treat them. And so, what that did is it allowed the hospital to have insights that, you know, it’s like you can’t teach a dog to meow and you can’t teach a cat to bark. So, what they actually did is, they had slightly different protocols and they actually rearranged some of the design of the emergency department unit that allowed them to shut down corridors in a way that you can still triage people out in the hallway, but you could actually shut down the corridor so an assailant can’t get through with barricaded kind of moving walls and shut down doors.

George Vergolias: [00:19:09] But it was a really interesting insight that allowed us to to get a better understanding of the behavioral side of how people respond. And that’s exactly why we go through these exercises, especially live simulations. So, it really was interesting.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:19:24] Yeah. What an interesting learning just to see how the variance in your staff is thinking and reacting. I’m sure military probably has similar – you know, when you talk about Medals of Valor and all of those where somebody has stepped in to help their fellow soldier even though there is active, you know, bullets or anything coming at them. So, very interesting. So, in talking workplace violence in the hospital setting, do you think that it has changed, or increased, or has it shown up in different ways over this last year? Or is it about the same but maybe just increased? What are your thoughts on that?

George Vergolias: [00:20:01] I think it has increased. In fact, again, I mentioned that one study, 20 percent of nurses reported an increase in physical violence during the pandemic. And, again, this is an already at risk workplace group, significantly at risk. In fact, what’s interesting, I saw another study from Forbes, I think, about two or three years ago, nursing is one of the most admired professions and it’s also one of the single biggest risk of workplace violence professions.

George Vergolias: [00:20:32] What I think based on some of the factors we’ve already discussed is that, yes, workplace violence risk has increased. I think it’s increased across the board in health care settings. But in particular, at that tip of the spear, at that emergency department, EMS, first contact kind of role, I think we’ve clearly seen an uptick. And most of that violence – and it might be helpful for me to go into just a couple of minutes describing this – is what we call effective or reactive violence.

George Vergolias: [00:21:03] So, a little quick primer on that. What we know from studies that go back now almost 80 years is that, there’s basically two biological modes or physiobiological modes of violence in the human brain. And, sadly, we know this because we used to study cats 90 years ago. They put electrodes inside cats and they expose them to different scenarios. And what they found is a cornered cat versus a cat who’s stalking maybe a bird in the backyard, they have very different neurochemical and neuroanatomical processes in the brain.

George Vergolias: [00:21:34] The corner cat, of course, is in a fight or flight environment. They’re hissing. Their claws are out. They’re showing their teeth. Their back is arched. And if you went to pick up a cornered cat, you’re probably going to get scratched or bit. And I would not recommend that.

George Vergolias: [00:21:50] A cat that stalking is the opposite. It’s very subdued. It’s very focused. It’s claws and its teeth are not out because it’s not ready to pounce yet. It’s in a very covert mode. And what’s interesting is, you could pick up a stalking cat and you could walk five feet before the cat even realizes it’s been picked up because it’s locked on that prey.

George Vergolias: [00:22:11] Well, they have since study that in humans. And what they have found is very similar correlates. So, effective reactive violence is emotional, it’s reactive, it’s often spurred on by substance abuse or intoxication. Most violence is effective. It’s emotional. It’s relationship-based. It’s crimes of passion or violence of passion.

George Vergolias: [00:22:32] And then, of course, you have predatory violence, which is your mass shooter, cold, calculated. When you hear about cases just like San Jose recently, Columbine, the Vegas shooter, these people aren’t agitated. They’re not worked up emotionally. They’re cold and calculated.

George Vergolias: [00:22:49] What’s interesting is we’ve seen a market uptick in emotional reactive or effective violence in workplace. People are coming in more agitated, more hostile. From a mental health perspective, they’re more decompensated. And just average normative people that don’t have mental illness are frustrated because they’re waiting much longer than they ever used to. And they’re waiting because of conditions that, a year prior, they would have been seen within 30 minutes or less. And, now, they’re waiting six hours. And on top of it, they’re stressed about the pandemic.

George Vergolias: [00:23:25] Just now we’re starting to reclaim our lives. Things are opening up. People are going out to dinner. There’s a little uptick in people returning back to work. So, hopefully, that emotionality will be alleviated a bit. But, certainly, up until a month or two ago, that was all heightened by all of those factors. That’s a great question.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:23:44] Interesting. So, looking at those factors, looking at the increase in workplace violence, obviously you’ve heard from other conversations, burnout and mental health concerns within that hospital industry. What are some of the suggestions that you have for a hospital administration and helping their people to continue with remaining resilient and start to thrive again?

George Vergolias: [00:24:10] One of the key things is, I think, it’s important to be aware of the problem. It starts with awareness, right? I think another key issue is communicate clearly with teams around what is the administration’s perspective of the problem, understanding of the problem, and what are they doing. I say this a lot in trainings and webinars, it’s important for leaders to know that employees and other stakeholders don’t expect us to all have the answers or to have all the answers. People are really gracious to knowing no one alive has been through this before. Or if they were alive, they’re 100 and some years old and they don’t remember it. Certainly, they weren’t leaders in any organization.

George Vergolias: [00:24:59] But what is important is that we are asking the right questions. And we’re conveying to our stakeholders and our employees that we’re asking the right questions. And we’re trying to get the right answers. So, I think that’s important as well. Back to my active shooter exercise example, understand that different groups within your organization may respond differently to different stress points.

George Vergolias: [00:25:25] If you go to the neonatal wellness group, or in some cases the post-operative group or the post-cardiac group or the recovery group, and you talk about meditation, and wellbeing, and the importance of eating well, and massage, that’s probably going to hit home. You talk about that to a group of hardened emergency department physicians, good luck. Now, I’m not saying that physicians aren’t going to meditate in the ED or who work in the ED. But this is more of a hardened group, so you need your metaphors, your images of growth to be different.

George Vergolias: [00:26:04] Almost, to me, what has worked well is I use the analogy of them being athletes. As an emergency physician, most of them would understand that Tiger Woods or Serena Williams or Lionel Messi, they don’t get a massage for wellbeing. They get a massage so they can perform at their peak. Physicians get those metaphors in those settings. And so, it’s important to understand what is going to work for these different groups in terms of getting buy-in to the programs and the resources that they’re trying to promote. So, I would say off the top of my head, those are the big things that are important to keep in mind.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:26:39] Right. Great. So, right now, we’re going to get a word from our sponsor. So, Workplace MVP is sponsored by R3 Continuum. R3 Continuum is a global leader in providing expert, reliable, responsive, and tailored behavioral health, crisis, and security solutions to promote workplace wellbeing and performance in the face of an ever changing and often unpredictable world. Learn more about how R3 Continuum can tailor a solution for your organization’s unique challenges by visiting www.r3c.com today.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:27:15] So, now, we’ve been discussing the health care industry and the work environment within that quite a bit in the first half of the show. So, I’m just curious, are there other industry work environments seeing some of the same challenges that the hospital industry has been seeing?

George Vergolias: [00:27:33] Yeah. Certainly. Now, they have different pain points from what we’ve been talking about, but certainly they’re seeing increased pressures to perform, reduced resources, and other kind of exacerbating stressors going on. A few is the trucking industry has been significantly impacted in terms of – I mean, as if Amazon and other shipping wasn’t big enough – we all went to that in a massive way. And for many of us, we’re not going back.

George Vergolias: [00:28:08] I was a big fan of going into grocery stores before the pandemic. I like to walk around. I like to pick my produce. Once we started using Instacart – which is not exactly trucking – but once we started moving to using Instacart, now we’re stuck – it’s not we’re stuck. We have a habit now and it’s convenient and now we use Instacart to deliver our groceries. I still will go in and pick certain things out if we’re having a big event.

George Vergolias: [00:28:33] So, there’s been a behavioral shift where trucking and shipping delivery services – again, like Amazon, FedEx, UPS – they’ve been significantly impacted. Railyards, again, we saw shooting at the San Jose railyard. And there’s a lot of indication that this individual, the assailant, had long standing anger and resentment and felt untreated fairly and whatnot. But, to me, there’s no doubt that the pandemic and the additional stressors that were probably on those staff further exacerbated him to a tipping point.

George Vergolias: [00:29:11] Now, I’m not blaming the workplace, I want to be clear here. But in that Psychgeist of stressors, those are the kind of things that move people from a pre-contemplative stage, to a stage of maybe I can do this, to a stage of I’m going to do this, I’m going to take a severe action like this.

George Vergolias: [00:29:29] Manufacturing is another one. A lot of pressure in that environment. First responders, police, EMS, even firefighters, all of these are situations that have increased stress. So, I think all of those are kind of heightened industries off the top of my head. But what I think we’re going to see as well is return to work is going to also heighten that for many people who are just going back to the workplace, and have various questions around safety related to COVID or second variance and so on.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:30:06] Definitely. And then, looking at those various environments and the organizational leadership trying to support the people within it, are there similar recommendations you would make for them that you did for the hospital industry or does it change based on that industry?

George Vergolias: [00:30:25] Yeah. Great question. I would say they are similar recommendations. I remember an old – I can’t remember the movie. It was a movie where Nick Nolte was a basketball coach and he was kind of a Bobby Knight type style, yelling at his players. And he basically said at halftime that he’s going to take their plan for the second half and he’s going to give it to the other team because it’s not what you do, it’s how you do it. You know, the movie was interesting, but I always love that statement.

George Vergolias: [00:30:55] Because in this case, what I’ve already said are the things that I would recommend. So, what you do are going to be pretty similar. Start with those high points that we’ve talked about. But the way in which you do it, you’ve got to cater the messaging to your culture and to your people. And that’s going to be very different for a trucking company as opposed to a yoga studio, as opposed to an Amazon warehouse, or some other location. So, it’s important as leaders to know what is kind of the culture that we’re working with, and what is the messaging, and the resources that are going to hit home to that culture.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:31:35] Great. So, with workplaces that have employees who have been in a remote environment that are now returning to the workplace, do you feel there will be an increase in these challenges that they need to consider?

George Vergolias: [00:31:48] I do. I do. Now, I’m not sure there will be an uptick in violence from the perspective of an average workplace. But I think there will be an uptick in emotionality. And with that comes an uptick in hostility. Hopefully, a lot of that will be on the verbal side and it will be able to be mitigated fairly quickly with good leadership. Some may, though, trip over into violence.

George Vergolias: [00:32:10] But I think what we’re going to see is a lot of people still have anxiety around return to work. Is it safe? The variance that we’re seeing in other countries such as India or other areas, certainly, eventually those will get here. They’re starting to get here. How is that going to impact us? How good are the current vaccines going to be? What’s the workplace policy in allowing non-vaccinated people to come back into the workplace?

George Vergolias: [00:32:38] Interestingly enough, my 13 year old just got her first shot for vaccination. My 11 year old isn’t eligible. So, it’s interesting, my wife is working at a hotel, she has some concern. She’s vaccinated. She’s probably very limited risk for getting sick. What if she brings it back to my son who can’t be vaccinated yet, because that hasn’t rolled out for the under 12 or 13 year olds.

George Vergolias: [00:32:59] These are all going to be concerns that different people will have to different degrees. And they’ll be exacerbated by the way different workplaces are laid out. Are you all going back to individual offices or are you all going back to cubicles or open floor planning type of workplaces? So, these are things that I think leaders have to be very proactive about and on top of ahead of time.

George Vergolias: [00:33:21] And, again, the goal isn’t to have all the answers. But to convey we’re asking the right questions and we’re open to your questions as employees. And we’re going to work with you to find the right solutions that help you feel safe and secure. So, I think that would be kind of the single biggest concern for us as we return to work.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:33:41] Right. So, thinking over some of the things you’ve discussed today and then just things from your expertise and trainings if you were going to be consulting with an employer, if there were three things that you wanted our listeners to be aware of and take away from this episode for how they should be supporting their work environment with these challenges, what would they be?

George Vergolias: [00:34:04] I’m going to answer this at a high level, because we talked about some details. And I think sometimes the high level can be useful. The first is, awareness and understanding are key. I mean, many of us probably have heard the saying, “Everyone is fighting a battle you know nothing about.” I think it’s important to understand that even the people that look strongest in our work forces may be struggling with things that they’re adjusting to, whether it’s home schooling, nervous about acclimating, maybe they feel safe coming back to work but they have a spouse that has an entirely different workplace scenario and they’re freaking out about it understandably. So, that’s the first.

George Vergolias: [00:34:46] The other is a saying I heard that I love and that is, “You don’t drown by falling in the river. You drown by staying submerged under the water.” And I love that saying because I use it to say, leadership needs to model strength through vulnerability. As leaders, if all we ever do is act strong and put a strong face up, we have two messages to our constituents, to our stakeholders, and to our employees. One is, it’s not okay to not be okay. And that’s not a good message. And two is, we don’t model for them the ability to say, you might fall down, but you have the ability to get back up. And when you get back up, you’re going to be stronger. So, yeah, things are tough, but you’re getting tougher. So, that’s another key message that I think is important.

George Vergolias: [00:35:36] Now, that doesn’t mean leaders need to be crying on a town hall meeting for an hour. But the ability to be a little vulnerable and demonstrate that as a leader, I can show vulnerability and I can still tap into my resilience, that is a very powerful message for employees to have.

George Vergolias: [00:35:54] And then, I would say the third is communication. I mentioned this before, communicating to them often, proactively, frequently, and bidirectionally. Don’t just communicate to them, but have a channel by which employees can communicate back and share what is working, what isn’t working, what concerns and anxieties do they have. And then, respond quickly back to them on those. And, again, with the idea that we may not have all the answers, but we’re asking the right questions. And we’re open to them bringing the questions to the table. So, those are the three things that I would say at a pretty high level, really, are going to drive effective leadership as we return to work.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:36:35] Great. So, now, back to you. Looking over your career, if you were going to pick one thing that you’re most proud of, what would that be?

George Vergolias: [00:36:48] That’s tough. It’s tough for two reasons, because I’m proud of a lot of things. But, again, back to that shark analogy, I don’t dwell on what I’ve accomplished. I finish it. And I go, “What’s my next challenge?” And this is going to sound self-serving. But my tenure with R3, you know, when we started, we were doing 800 or 900 crisis responses a month. We are now responding to 2,000 plus crises a month in the workplace across a range of industries and a range of problems. And each of those isn’t just an individual contact. That’s a life you’re helping. You’re contacting. You’re helping make better. You’re helping make more resilient.

George Vergolias: [00:37:35] Who then makes their coworkers, and their children, and their spouses, and their neighbors more resilient. And when you do the math, we have helped millions and millions of lives deepen their sense of resilience in the world. And that is a force multiplier that is absolutely amazing. So, I would say it’s that work that we do at R3 every day, every month, week in, week out, that probably is what I’m most proud of. Being at the clinical helm, if you will, of that is amazing.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:38:07] Great. And if our listeners wanted to get a hold of you, how can they do that?

George Vergolias: [00:38:12] So, the best way to contact me is through, probably, email at my R3. And that is george – G-E-O-R-G-E- -.vergolias – V as in Victor-E-R-G-O-L-I-A-S as in Sam – @R – capital R – the number 3C – as in cat or Charlie – .com would be the best way to reach me.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:38:37] Wonderful. Well, thank you so much for being on our show today, Dr. Vergolias, and for letting us celebrate you, for sharing your stories, and the wonderful advice that you have provided to our listeners. There’s no doubt that they were able to get something from your information and expertise today. We appreciate you. And I’m sure your organizations and staff that you work with do as well.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:39:00] And we also want to thank our show sponsor, R3 Continuum, for supporting the Workplace MVP podcast. And to our listeners, thank you for tuning in. If you have not already done so, make sure to subscribe so you get our most recent episodes and other resources. You can also follow our show on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter @workplacemvp. If you are a workplace MVP or know someone who is, we want to know. Email us at info@workplace-mvp.com. And thank you all for joining us and have a great rest of your day.

 

 

Tagged With: Dr. George Vergolias, Jamie Gassmann, R3 Continuum, Workplace MVP

The R3 Continuum Playbook: Workplace Mental Health in a Pandemic

April 15, 2021 by John Ray

workplace mental health
Minneapolis St. Paul Studio
The R3 Continuum Playbook: Workplace Mental Health in a Pandemic
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workplace mental health

The R3 Continuum Playbook: Workplace Mental Health in a Pandemic

Dr. George Vergolias discusses how the pandemic has quite significantly affected workplace mental health, and he shares strategies employers can adopt to mitigate the effect of this pressing problem. The R3 Continuum Playbook is presented by R3 Continuum and is produced by the Minneapolis-St.Paul Studio of Business RadioX®. R3 Continuum is the underwriter of Workplace MVP, the show which celebrates heroes in the workplace.

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:00] Broadcasting from the Business RadioX Studios, here is your R3 Continuum Playbook. Brought to you by Workplace MVP sponsor, R3 Continuum – a global leader in workplace behavioral health, crisis, and security solutions.

George Vergolias: [00:00:13] Greetings. I am Dr. George Vergolias, Medical Director at R3 Continuum. And today, I want to discuss the broadly known issue that behavioral health is being identified as the next pandemic. And with this increasing realization comes the challenge of figuring out how the pandemic is impacting the current state of wellbeing in our workplaces. This has had a significant impact on workplaces across the globe.

George Vergolias: [00:00:36] According to a recently published World Health Organization study, the pandemic has disrupted or halted critical mental health services in 93 percent of countries worldwide while the demand for mental health has been increasing. From the National Institute of Health, in the pre-COVID years leading up to 2019, roughly 10 percent of adults reported anxiety or depressive symptoms. However, in 2020, post-COVID, that incidence quadrupled to 40 percent. A survey in June of 2020 showed that 13 percent of adults reported new or increased substance abuse and 11 percent of adults reported onset of suicidal thoughts.

George Vergolias: [00:01:16] Fears of the virus created a significant stressor as well. But the response of governments to minimize spread, while understandable and needed, also created a host of other psychosocial stressors. Which, not only increased overall stress load, but simultaneously strained worker’s coping resources. These have had a profound impact on the workplace. Just some examples, unemployment or risk of such, reduced work productivity, increased absenteeism and presentism, increased irritability and hostility, reduction in team engagement, isolation and loneliness. And work from home with all of its attendant challenges such as home schooling and other issues. All of these have been present.

George Vergolias: [00:01:55] In my opinion, one of the most damaging aspects to business is when people are highly stressed, anxious, and depressed, they greatly struggle to bring innovation and creativity. And without innovation and creativity, businesses suffer. It’s kind of a classic Catch-22.

George Vergolias: [00:02:16] As a business leader, there are things that you can do to mitigate these issues within your organization. Proactively supporting your employees is a primary approach. And I want to highlight five key suggestions towards that aim that we continually find at R3 in the consulting work that we do with large and small organizations.

George Vergolias: [00:02:36] First, remember that even one year into the pandemic, this is still new to all of us. Even with very positive news of vaccines coming online, remember, this is a vaccine produced within a record-breaking timeframe for a disease that has not been known to us before in this particular manner or strain. Certainly, coronaviruses have been part of the human species journey for at least 10,000 years. But this particular version is a new wrinkle and we’re still sorting it out.

George Vergolias: [00:03:04] As leaders, it is critically important to place that in proper context. To explain that while science has made miraculous strides in combating this virus in such a short time, we still have more to learn and we still may have more adjustments. This helps level set expectations and tempers fears across your organization, and it’s an important first step.

George Vergolias: [00:03:26] Second, provide timely and accurate information to your employees. I like to say that fear loves a vacuum. In the absence of good intel, humans will tend to speculate. And when we do that without good information, we tend to do so in a negative direction. And in some cases, that can border on paranoid thinking and paralyzing fear. As leaders, it is important to provide our employees with information that is credible, believable, and based on the best available science at the time.

George Vergolias: [00:03:55] This doesn’t mean that what we share today will be accurate in a few months, as the science is evolving and the medical understanding is evolving over time. That is why the point above is critical to set the proper expectations so people can adjust to changes as we move forward. And then, provide your employees information so they can be informed based on best evidence science at the current time. And thus, make informed decisions pertinent to their safety concerns and in a manner that reduces anxiety and fearful isolation.

George Vergolias: [00:04:27] Third, we need to communicate clearly to our employees. Once you level set expectations and then find clear and credible information to disseminate, you must clearly communicate such to your company, employees, and, if appropriate, other stakeholders. Communication should be clear, concise, and placed into context of it being based on the best available evidence and information currently available.

George Vergolias: [00:04:52] This has several benefits. It allows you as a leader to convey a sense of accountability and competence at the highest level of your organization. And in doing so, you become a trusted voice and one that employees can rely on to find answers and provide needed resources. It also initiates a dialogue with your employees within the context of trust and candor, which can be vitally important at times of increased stress. And lastly, this allows you to later clarify any misunderstandings that might arise. And in the current context, if needed, reframe things later as the medical field learns more about the disease, about vaccinations, and even about new strains and their impact on people.

George Vergolias: [00:05:34] A key component of communication is communicating bidirectionally, in both ways, to your employees, but also listening. In a landscape of potential fear, communication must go in both directions. The best military generals seek input from and listen to their soldiers on the front lines because they have the most relevant up to date information of the battlefield. In many ways, as leaders, we could learn from this. Thus, communication must occur in both directions.

George Vergolias: [00:06:03] When people are fearful, they do want timely and clear information shared with them. But equally important is that they want their concerns to be heard and understood. Additionally, they may have suggestions for coping. They may have suggestions for accessing additional resources that leadership was not aware of. And they can offer support to others in ways that they have been dealing with things that leadership may not be aware, but which can be beneficial to others in your organization. Your employees are a resource for resilience, so do not let that resources go untapped. So, I recommend opening up a dialogue with your employees so that leadership can understand those concerns and then direct interventions and policies accordingly.

George Vergolias: [00:06:47] A fourth point is, set clear policy and act consistent with that policy over time, but make changes when needed. Let me explain that a little further. To be clear, I am not recommending any specific policy here as any policy must be anchored to your company, and culture, and your risk tolerance, as well as your particular organizational needs. Yet whatever policy you have about requiring vaccinations or not, returning to work or not, when to return or not, travel restrictions and so on, all of those should be outlined and explained as clearly as possible and as often as needed.

George Vergolias: [00:07:26] We often say that one has to repeat something up to seven times for a group to understand it and retain it. So, consistency is important here. As frequent shifts in policy can lead to increased confusion and frustration, as well as employees emotionally checking out if they keep hearing different variations of a policy. The only exception to this, of course, and something to be mindful of, is that, if medical experts make changes to best practice recommendations that directly impact your policy, that would require adjustments over time.

George Vergolias: [00:08:01] But, again, if you open up with my first bullet point saying that there clearly is kind of a new direction that we’re figuring out as we go and you set that level of expectation, people will adapt well to that. So, it is not the occasional change that is the problem here. It is rapid, seemingly irrational changes that can be problematic as your employees view leadership and their decisions. So, set a North Star by picking a course of action and follow that as long as it remains consistent with medical guidelines. As I said earlier here, consistency goes a long way. If you build in expectations properly, as noted above, your employees will be able to adjust accordingly and with minimal frustration.

George Vergolias: [00:08:45] Fifth, mobilize resources to build resilience and enhance coping. Employees will show individual responses to uncertainty and fear, and this will vary greatly. Some will seemingly show no noticeable response, and they’ll seem to be managing things very well. Others will evidently be struggling emotionally. And others may still be experiencing a silent struggle where they’re struggling internally, but they’re not showing it on the surface, and it may be much more difficult to detect.

George Vergolias: [00:09:14] And further, all of these different variations will occur on different trajectories as some people will improve in their functioning and coping with this, as others will continue to struggle. And when others are coming out of their struggle, different people that have been coping well might fall into a struggle. So, it is imperative to make available resources to help build resilience, tap into existing coping mechanisms, and in some cases, seek additional, more formal clinical treatments when needed.

George Vergolias: [00:09:45] Since the onset of this pandemic, we at R3 have seen a dramatic increase in request for these support services across the many organizations with whom we consult. These include the following, wellness outreach. Wellness outreach is timely and proactive outreach calls by trained resilience coaches with the goal of checking in on how people are coping, and assisting them to maximize their coping strategies, or tighten up existing strategies that may not be working as well as they’d like.

George Vergolias: [00:10:14] Another thing we’ve been doing is what we call facilitated discussions. These are group format discussions aimed at supporting employees and allowing them to address their fears, navigate cultural differences that might be existing in the organization, and share successful strategies for adapting and thriving to the pandemic and other social stressors that are occurring. In this role, we are really trying to help facilitate this discussion in a way that business leaders may not be comfortable with or may want an outside party as more of an objective support resource.

George Vergolias: [00:10:48] Another thing we’ve been doing quite extensively is what we call disruptive event management. When a negative event impacts a workplace, it could be the onset of a breakout of COVID. It could be an untimely death, in some cases of suicide. Any kind of event that really disrupts the flow and functioning and emotional stability of a workplace, we can respond providing onsite or virtual behavioral health coaching that supports and helps individuals adjust to that emotional impact after that specific disruptive event impacts the workforce. And the goal is maximizing a resilient adjustment. What we know is when these types of disruptive events occur, the sooner that we can get in and help people tap in to organic natural coping resources, the better people tend to do.

George Vergolias: [00:11:40] Then, another thing to consider is referring people to more formal clinical behavioral health options. In some cases, an individual is emotionally struggling at an intensity or for a long duration, such that linkage to a behavioral health provider and into clinical treatment is warranted. So, as you navigate forward as a leader, be aware of resources in your area. Be aware of resources through your employee assistance program, if appropriate, and others that might be covered through your available insurance options. So that if this need arises, you can mobilize those resources quickly and link employees to the proper resources if they need that level of treatment or support.

George Vergolias: [00:12:26] So, in summation here, employee behavioral health is suffering. And I expect and what we’re seeing from all the data is, we expect this to continue well into 2021 and likely into 2022. But here’s the good news, you can help change that and R3 Continuum can help. On our website, which is r3c.com, there are a number of resources that can be found in our Resources tab. Along with that, we have a number of tailored solutions to help support your unique challenges. Contact us today for a free consultation at info@r3c.com.

George Vergolias: [00:13:04] I want to thank you for giving me this time. And, hopefully, these tips and suggestions have been helpful so you can bring leadership to bear in a very proactive and positive manner as we navigate forward through the pandemic. Thank you again.

Show Underwriter

R3 Continuum (R3c) is the underwriter of Workplace MVP, a show which celebrates the everyday heroes–Workplace Most Valuable Professionals–in human resources, risk management, security, business continuity, and the C-suite who resolutely labor for the well-being of employees in their care, readying the workplace for and planning responses to disruption.

R3 Continuum is a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. R3c helps ensure the psychological and physical safety of organizations and their people in today’s ever-changing and often unpredictable world. Through their continuum of tailored solutions, including evaluations, crisis response, executive optimization, protective services, and more, they help organizations maintain and cultivate a workplace of wellbeing so that their people can thrive. Learn more about R3c at www.r3c.com.

Connect with R3 Continuum:  Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

Tagged With: behavioral health, George Vergolias, mental health, pandemic, R3 Continuum, workplace mental health, Workplace MVP

Introduction to “Workplace MVP,” with Host Jamie Gassmann

April 1, 2021 by John Ray

Workplace MVP
Minneapolis St. Paul Studio
Introduction to "Workplace MVP," with Host Jamie Gassmann
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Workplace MVP

Introduction to “Workplace MVP,” with Host Jamie Gassmann

Every day, around the world, organizations of all sizes face disruptive events and situations. Within those workplaces are everyday heroes in human resources, risk management, security, business continuity, and the C-suite. They don’t call themselves heroes though. On the contrary, they simply show up every day, laboring for the well-being of employees in their care, readying the workplace for and planning responses to disruption. This show, “Workplace MVP,” confers on these heroes the designation they deserve, Workplace MVP (Most Valuable Professionals), and gives them the forum to tell their story. As you hear their experiences, you will learn first-hand, real life approaches to readying the workplace, responses to crisis situations, and overcoming challenges of disruption. Join us as they share their stories of hope, courage, and tenacity:  www.workplace-mvp.com.

“Workplace MVP” is underwritten and presented by R3 Continuum and produced by the Minneapolis-St.Paul Studio of Business RadioX®.

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:04] Broadcasting from the Business RadioX studios, it’s time for Workplace MVP. Workplace MVP is brought to you by R3 Continuum, a global leader in workplace behavioral health, crisis, and security solutions. Now, here’s your host, Jamie Gassmann.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:28] Hello, everyone. And welcome to episode zero of our new show, Workplace MVP. I am your host, Jamie Gassmann, and I’d like to share a story with you. Picture a large retailer in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, while other businesses have shut down, this retailer must remain open as it is considered an essential source of food and other household necessities in communities across the United States. Their employees are called upon to work amid rising COVID cases; thereby, increasing their exposure to and potential for catching the virus. Meanwhile, these same employees are dealing with mounting personal stressors, such as kids at home adjusting to distance learning, fear of losing loved ones to the virus, anxiety about bringing COVID home to family members, anxiety about not being able to care for and/or visit elderly relatives, familial job loss and much more.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:25] Now, in this case, the company’s HR leaders responded to the crisis and the many workplace challenges it created by intentionally and proactively putting the psychological and physical safety of their employees first. The result, employees felt heard, cared for, safer and appreciated. And in turn, those employees empowered by this support from their company stood on the front lines and served customers while stores remained open. A pandemic may have created extraordinary conditions, which received much more notice, but it’s work like this, which top HR leaders have always done, often in circumstances which don’t get much attention. These leaders hire, train, encourage, protect, advocate for and help create the conditions necessary for employees to succeed in serving customers, fellow employees and the overall company.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:02:24] Doug Conant, former President and CEO of the Campbell Soup Company, notes that the soft stuff, the essential people-focused work, which HR professionals engage in each day, is indeed the hard stuff. So, when in the marketplace, Conant once said, “You must first win in the workplace.” This podcast showcases the impact of those HR, security, risk, continuity and senior leadership professionals who propel their companies to wins in the workplace, so, in turn, their company can win in the marketplace. We call them workplace MVPs, most valuable professionals. Conscientious leaders, who put people first and work to innovatively support their employees in our complex and challenging world. It’s stories like the one I just told you, which we’ll be featuring on Workplace MVP. And they’ll be shared directly with you by the executives, HR professionals, risk managers, security directors, and other organizational leaders who’ve experienced them and had direct accountability and planning for, responding to and leading recovery efforts in the face of crisis and disruption.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:35] The reality is that every day, workplaces face disruption, be it the death of an employee or a leader, natural disasters, workplace violence, workplace accidents, robbery, layoffs, pandemic, civil unrest and more. And every day, there are heroic workplace MVPs who respond to those challenges by providing multilevel support and taking proactive steps to prepare for future disruption. Together, we’ll learn lessons, gain inspiration and hope exploring best practices and new approaches.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:04:09] Welcome to Workplace MVP, the source of inspiring stories and best practice approaches to preparing for, responding to and overcoming the challenges of disruption in the workplace. Thank you for joining us and make sure to subscribe, so you see our most recent episodes and supporting resources. If you’re an MVP with a story to share, please email us at workplacemvp@r3c.com. We would love to connect with you.

“Workplace MVP” Host Jamie Gassmann

In addition to serving as the host to the Workplace MVP podcast, Jamie is currently the Director of Marketing at R3 Continuum (R3c). Collectively, she has more than fourteen years of marketing experience. Across her tenure, she has experience working in and with various industries including banking, real estate, retail, crisis management, insurance, business continuity, and more. She holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mass Communications with special interest in Advertising and Public Relations and a Master of Business Administration from Paseka School of Business, Minnesota State University.

Show Underwriter

R3 Continuum (R3c) is a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. R3c helps ensure the psychological and physical safety of organizations and their people in today’s ever-changing and often unpredictable world. Through their continuum of tailored solutions, including evaluations, crisis response, executive optimization, protective services, and more, they help organizations maintain and cultivate a workplace of wellbeing so that their people can thrive. Learn more about R3c at www.r3c.com.

Connect with R3 Continuum:  Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

Tagged With: business continuity, C-Suite, employee well-being, employee wellness, Human Resources, Jamie Gassmann, preventing workplace violence, R3 Continuum, Risk Management, stress in the workplace, workplace, workplace mental health, Workplace MVP

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