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Home » Industry News » Health & Safety News » Workplace burnout becomes South Africa’s silent productivity killer

Workplace burnout becomes South Africa’s silent productivity killer

Workplace burnout becomes South Africa’s silent productivity killer

AS businesses race to close out the year, a growing threat is quietly eroding South Africa’s productivity: workplace burnout. With 36% of employees experiencing daily stress and over 71% disengaged at work, the impact on the economy is staggering – and climbing.

Recent data shows that unplanned absenteeism costs South African organisations around R25 billion annually, while mental health-related productivity losses drain the economy of a further R161 billion every year. The financial and human toll has made employee wellbeing not just an HR priority, but a strategic business and health imperative as well.

“No business can thrive without a healthy workforce,” says Michelle Ward, Head of Talent at Bestmed Medical Scheme. Currently, corporate groups make up 60% of Bestmed’s membership base, signalling a clear shift towards integrated wellbeing solutions that go beyond traditional medical cover. “Employers are starting to recognise that investing in healthcare is fundamental to good business practice”.

As one of South Africa’s leading medical schemes, Bestmed has seen a marked increase in corporates prioritising employee health as a core benefit, seeking out comprehensive healthcare benefits and wellness programmes that can complement their Employee Assistance Programme (EAP).

These employee-based healthcare models combine preventative care, mental health education and chronic disease management to help curb burnout before it leads to absenteeism or presenteeism. Programmes built around a biopsychosocial model provide access to on-site and off-site professionals who diagnose and treat stress-related conditions – making professional care both accessible and normalised.

The results are tangible. When employees are supported through wellness screenings, counselling services and health education, they show higher engagement, lower turnover and improved performance. The return on investment in wellbeing strategies can be measured not only in productivity gains but in the creation of a healthier, more resilient workforce.

As Ward notes, “We’ve seen first-hand that companies willing to invest in the basics, from onsite nurse consultations to mental health programmes, are the ones reaping the benefits in staff morale, retention and overall output. Wellness has become an economic lever, not an expense line.”

As the year draws to a close, organisations would do well to seek a partner that provides solutions to health challenges to make the journey a less complicated one. The cost of ignoring employee health is far higher than the cost of investing in it – and in 2026, the businesses that thrive will be those that treat health and wellbeing as a competitive advantage,” concludes Ward.

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