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  • AccueilBlog santéAperçu de la main-d’œuvre mondiale

    Why Proactive Stress Management is Now a Business Imperative for Global Employers

    Why Proactive Stress Management is Now a Business Imperative for Global Employers

    Published on 10 avr. 2026

    Workplace stress is a critical and costly issue for global employers, affecting employee health, productivity, and organisational performance. Managing stress proactively across diverse regions and cultures is essential to maintain workforce vitality and resilience.

    Stress has become one of the most pervasive and costly challenges facing today’s global workforce. As organisations navigate economic uncertainty, rapid technological change, and increasingly complex ways of working, employees across regions are reporting heightened pressure — at work and beyond. As a global healthcare insurer working closely with employers, we see firsthand how workplace stress manifests not only in engagement and productivity, but in healthcare utilisation and long-term employee health outcomes. 

    For employers with globally distributed teams, the challenge of helping employees manage stress is amplified by cultural differences, varying access to care across geographies, and uneven expectations around work‑life balance.  

    From a health perspective, chronic stress is a known risk factor that exacerbates both mental and physical conditions, often leading to increased healthcare needs, longer recovery times, and higher absence from work[1]. Over time, unmanaged stress erodes workforce resilience and vitality, directly affecting organisational performance. Vitality is the capacity to pursue life with health, strength, and energy.  

    For global employers, the question is no longer whether stress should be addressed, but how to proactively manage stress across borders to maintain employee health. 

    Why the global nature of workplace stress matters for employers 

    Across regions, common stressors emerged in our yearly Cigna Healthcare International Health study[1], which found that the top three stressors globally were financial stress, cost of living, and uncertainty about the future. Remote and hybrid working models, while offering flexibility, have also made it harder for many employees to switch off, increasing the risk of burnout — particularly where the boundaries between work and non‑work become blurred[2]. 

    Globally mobile and internationally dispersed workforces face additional layers of complexity[3]. Employees working across time zones may experience extended working hours, disrupted sleep patterns, and social isolation. Those stressors are amplified for globally mobile employees, as they’re away from their usual social supports and face added pressures of integrating into a new social environment at work. Cultural norms around speaking up about stress or mental health can further prevent early intervention, allowing issues to escalate unnoticed. 

    Stress rarely exists in isolation: it often exacerbates existing physical health conditions and contributes to mental health challenges[4]. Organisations that fail to address stress systematically risk normalising unsustainable ways of working. 

    Shifting organisations to a preventive culture 

    While support mechanisms remain essential, global employers are increasingly recognising the value of prevention. A preventive approach focuses on reducing avoidable stressors, strengthening employee resilience, and embedding well‑being into everyday ways of working. This requires more than just providing access to stress mitigation and well-being apps, because although they are helpful, organisations must call for real cultural change in order to make a difference. 

    Work‑life balance plays a defining role. When excessive workload, constant availability, or unclear expectations become ingrained, stress spills into personal lives, limiting recovery time and compounding health risks. Conversely, organisations that actively protect boundaries and promote sustainable performance send a clear signal that employee well‑being is a priority, not a trade‑off. 

    From our perspective as a global healthcare partner to employers, the most effective stress management strategies combine culture, leadership, and access to preventive health support. 

    What employers can do to proactively manage stress 

    To support employee vitality across regions, global employers can take practical, scalable actions: 

    1. Build stress prevention into benefits and workforce planning 
      Preventing stress is not just a cultural priority—it is a health strategy. Aligning job demands, workloads, and expectations with access to preventive health support helps reduce avoidable strain before it escalates into more serious health conditions that require clinical intervention. 
    2. Help managers connect employees to the right health support early 
      Managers are often the first to notice early warning signs of stress. Employers play a critical role by ensuring managers know how to guide employees toward available mental health benefits, employee assistance programmes, and appropriate care pathways as part of their health coverage. 
    3. Offer digital mental health and coaching programmes 
      Digital mental health and coaching programmes can provide accessible, scalable support for managing stress, building coping skills, and improving emotional well‑being. From a healthcare perspective, these tools help employees address stress early, complement clinical care where needed, and support prevention by making evidence‑based support easier to access across regions. 
    4. Create environments where employees feel safe using their benefits 
      Employees are more likely to seek help early when mental health and well-being are openly supported. Psychologically safe cultures—backed by accessible, inclusive health benefits—make it easier for employees to use available support without fear of stigma or negative consequences. 
    5. Offer Employee Assistance Programmes (EAPs) as an entry point to care 
      Employee Assistance Programmes provide confidential, early support for stress, mental health concerns, and everyday challenges that can affect overall well-being. From a healthcare perspective, EAPs play an important preventive role—helping employees access support early, navigate available services, and reduce the likelihood that unmanaged stress develops into more serious health conditions. 

    Employer takeaway 

    From a healthcare perspective, proactive stress management is a critical part of protecting employee health and preventing longer‑term mental and physical conditions. When employers address stress early—by supporting healthy ways of working, enabling recovery, and ensuring access to preventive health support—they can reduce health risks, improve well‑being, and sustain employee vitality. Organisations that take a preventive, health‑led approach to stress are better positioned to support workforce resilience and performance. 

    Sources

    1. Cigna Healthcare -Cigna Healthcare International Health Study 2025 (2025) 
    2. ILO - Social dialogue key to shape telework regulation | International Labour Organisation(2022) 
    3. Cigna Healthcare -2026 Globally Mobile Edition | Cigna Healthcare International Health Study (2026) 
    4. WHO - Mental health at work(2024) 

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    © Cigna

    This article serves only as a reference and is intended for informational purposes only. Nothing in this article constitutes legal, tax, financial planning, health or medical advice including diagnosis or treatment. Any reference to products or services offered by Cigna are available except where prohibited by applicable law and subject to terms and conditions.

    © Cigna Healthcare. Tous droits réservés.

    * Notez qu’il s’agit d’une représentation des garanties disponibles qui ne contient pas les modalités, conditions et exclusions propres à chaque garantie. Les garanties sont susceptibles d’être modifiées. Certaines prestations peuvent faire partie d’un module optionnel. Veuillez consulter le Guide client pour plus d’informations.

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