Good news for small to medium-sized businesses: your workforces are far less likely to be suffering from work-related stress, depression or anxiety than those in larger enterprises.
In fact, companies with less than 50 staff have roughly half as many burnt out workers than companies employing 250 or more people, relatively speaking.
In 2017, there were 970 cases of self-reported work-related stress, depression or anxiety per 100k workers in small British companies.
In those employing between 50 and 249 staff, there were 1,430 cases, while in the largest businesses there were a whopping 1,770 cases, according to the Health & Safety Executive (HSE).
But that doesn't mean small businesses should be relaxed about work-related stress. In 2016/7, the condition resulted in 12.5 million sick days (a 7% rise on the previous year) and smaller players arguably stand to lose most from staff absences.
The fewer personnel and resources you're operating with, the fewer options you have if your staff burn out.
All companies have a duty to protect staff from work-related stress and any employers of more than five people must produce written risk assessments.
Psychologists define burnout as a worker's response to chronic stress and have identified three different ways in which it can manifest itself. Here they are:
Overload burnout