Skip to content

Our People
Our Board
Our Partners
Our History

Member Directory
Find the local products or services you need from our Member Community

Member-to-Member OffersNEW
Check-out our exclusive offers for your business.

Advertise or Partner with usGROW
Improve brand visibility, grow your network and support our business community.

Our News
News, press releases and updates from Business Canterbury.

Bold Company
For what’s happening in the Canterbury business community.

HR Insights
Updates on HR and ER from our resident experts.

Manufacturing & Global Trade Bulletin Industry info for our Canterbury Manufacturers, Importers and Exporters.

RGB_Bold Company_Verticle_WhiteText

podcast.E2.700x450

Listen to some amazng business owners as they share their learnings, challenges and more on The Bold Company podcast, from Business Canterbury.

Business Advocacy
Championing our members’ views on policies and decisions at local and national levels so your voice can be heard.

Business Growth
Providing our members with experts who have the right knowledge, resources and contacts to help your business grow.


Contact us today to see how we can help.

Human Resources
Practical HR/ER support, expert advice, and customised training for your workplace.

Manufacturing
Driving innovation and success for manufacturers across Canterbury.

Global Trade
Supporting members to navigate and thrive in the international marketplace.

Export Documentation Services
Comprehensive Export Documentation Support

PREPARE FOR THE EVOLUTION (Presentation (169)) (5)

Learn how membership with Business Canterbury can help you take your business in the direction you want it to go. 

Standard Memberships

Connect Membership
Build your network and access a range of exclusive member benefits

Thrive Membership
Take your business further with enhanced support and expert guidance.

Invest Membership
Shaping the business landscape through premier support and business advocacy.

Lite Subscription
A taste of what we can offer you.

More Options

Manufacturing Membership
Backing Canterbury Manufacturers

Global Trade Membership
Developed for Importers and Exporters

HR Advice Membership
Expert HR Support When You Need It

HR Premium Membership
Expert Support at the Highest Level

WHAT IS CANTERBURY TRUSTED?

Canterbury Trusted recognises business excellence across our region, as awarded by Business Canterbury.

Why choose a Canterbury Trusted brand

LEARN MORE

About Canterbury Trusted
Differentiate yourself from your competitors.

Frequently Asked Questions
Contact Us

BlogHero.1024x51.QCBS.Aug23

ABOUT ADVOCACY

Our advocacy work programme ensures our members’ views are represented on policies and decisions at a local and national level.

LEARN MORE 

Grow knowledge, build capability and make connections through our events and learning opportunities.

No one does networking like Business Canterbury. Check out our events designed to engage, inform and help you expand your network.

Visit our Eventbrite page to

PMLunch2025.bg.600x300

DON'T MISS HOT

Power up your Leadership with Amy Jones

Wed 29 Oct | Refresh your approach, build your influence and lead with clarity.

Tickets from $199+GST.

ClearheadSep 30, 2025 4:20:25 PM5 min read

Meeting Crisis With Care: How HR Can Navigate Mental Health Challenges

Meeting Crisis With Care How HR Can Navigate Mental Health Challenges

HR and People & Culture teams are often the first to notice when something isn’t right. Supporting an employee in acute distress, responding to disclosures of self-harm or suicide risk, or navigating the balance between compassion and accountability when mental health is raised in a disciplinary process, these are among the most challenging situations HR professionals face. They come with high stakes, yet many HR leaders say they don’t feel fully equipped to manage them. And as these situations become more common in workplaces today, the need for practical tools and guidance becomes even greater.  

Clearhead Clinical Psychologist Barry Kirker says it is a growing challenge. “Since Covid there seems to be an increase in agitation and anxiety in society generally, and we’re seeing this play out in the workforce too,” he explains. “Employees who have been through years of upheaval and heightened uncertainty are more likely to bring their struggles into the workplace. HR teams are often the first to deal with that.” 


We’re proud to partner with Clearhead, our trusted EAP provider, to share practical wellbeing insights for the business community. This blog is part of our Clearhead series designed to help our members navigate challenges, build resilience, and better support their teams.

 

Navigating Difficult Situations 

Unlike traditional HR skills such as performance management or compliance, the situations HR leaders now face often involve high levels of risk and emotion. These scenarios can include: 

  • An employee discloses thoughts of suicide or self-harm. 
  • A team member is in visible distress but does not recognise or accept their mental health challenges. 
  • Mental health is raised during a disciplinary or performance conversation. 
  • Staff experience survivor guilt or trauma following organisational changes such as redundancies. 
  • HR professionals themselves carry the weight of supporting everyone else, sometimes as the only person in their organisation who can. 

“These are not situations where there is a quick policy fix,” Barry says. “They demand empathy, calm, and clear boundaries, and they take a toll on the people handling them.” 

Preparing Yourself for Difficult Conversations 

When employees bring heavy mental health challenges into the workplace, HR professionals often feel pressure to respond immediately. In these moments, it is not about waiting until you feel ready but about having practices in place that help you enter conversations as calm and grounded as possible. 

He encourages practitioners to check in with themselves daily, rating their emotional state on a scale from one to ten. A score of six or above suggests they are in the green zone, able to handle heavy conversations with composure. A four or five signals the orange zone, when caution is required. Anything lower indicates a red zone, when it may be wiser to postpone high-stakes meetings or involve additional support. 

“You cannot always control what happens in the workplace, but you can control whether you enter a conversation ready or depleted,” he says. Checking in with your own readiness and using your breaks to change how you are feeling can make all the difference. That might be as simple as taking a lunchtime walk, listening to music or doing some breathing exercises. 

Frameworks for Difficult Conversations 

For HR professionals, some of the hardest moments are when you need to raise sensitive issues with an employee - whether that is about performance, behaviour of concern, or how their wellbeing is affecting their work. These conversations can feel daunting, but having a clear structure can help. 

Barry points to a set of tools drawn from dialectical behaviour therapy, known by the acronym DEAR: 

  • Describe the situation in factual, neutral terms. 
  • Express why it matters, for the individual and the organisation. 
  • Assert what needs to change or what support is available. 
  • Reinforce the benefits of taking action, or the risks if nothing changes. 

He also highlights the “six Cs”: approaching conversations calmly, compassionately, consistently, and with clarity, confidence, and consequences. 

“These structured approaches give you a map to follow,” Barry explains. “They help you stay steady and keep the conversation constructive, even when the subject is challenging or emotionally charged.” 

The Boundaries Question 

HR managers often struggle with blurred boundaries. Unlike other departments, their role requires them to be both an advocate for staff and a guardian of organisational policy. Friendships at work, while natural, can complicate the impartiality that is needed in moments of crisis.  

“If you are finding yourself overly angry on behalf of someone, or overly sympathetic to their pain, that is a sign your boundaries are being affected,” Barry explains. “It does not mean you do not care, it means you need to recalibrate so you can actually help them effectively.” 

Boundaries can also protect HR professionals from becoming the primary outlet for an employee’s distress. While showing care and compassion is essential, so is ensuring employees are connected to appropriate professional help, whether through an EAP such as Clearhead, GP, or specialist services.

Caring for the Carers 

Underlying all of this is recognition that HR professionals cannot continue to support others if they are running on empty themselves. Barry warns that without deliberate strategies for recovery, it is easy for HR leaders to experience compassion fatigue, burnout, or even mental health struggles of their own. 

“You can do everything right in the room,” he says, “but if you are not looking after yourself outside it, you will burn out.” 

That means deliberately building recovery into the workday: stepping away from the desk after a difficult meeting, journaling about difficult interactions, or talking through situations with trusted peers. For HR leaders who are the only people in their role, finding external support networks such as EAP services or peer supervision is especially important. 

Meeting Crisis With Care 

Workplace crises involving mental health are not going away. If anything, they are becoming more common as employees feel more able to speak up about their struggles. For HR professionals, the challenge is balancing empathy with clear decision-making while protecting their own wellbeing in the process. 

Remember, you and your employees do not have to do this alone. It is important to have a trusted specialist provider that you can lean on for advice and professional support. Having a trusted EAP provider like Clearhead is one way you will feel that you are equipped with the tools you need to do your job well in this new environment with ever chaning employee expectations.  

“Crisis is inevitable,” Barry says. “What matters is how you meet it.” 

The DEAR framework originates from Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT), developed by Marsha Linehan (1993) as part of her skills training modules. 
Reference: Linehan, M. M. (1993). Skills training manual for treating borderline personality disorder. New York: Guilford Press. 

Follow our blog for more updates like this and the latest in HR/ER or sign-up to our monthly email to keep informed.

avatar
Clearhead
Clearhead is an innovative workplace wellbeing EAP provider delivering holistic and proactive employee wellbeing support. Get access to 1000+ mental health professionals, evidence-based self-help tools, and sophisticated organisational wellbeing data insights. Empowering employees to stay mentally well and thriving at work.

RELATED ARTICLES