Asli Atay
@asliatay.bsky.social
800 followers 480 following 54 posts
Senior Policy Adviser at the Work Foundation. Interested in labour market and health. Previously at the Learning& Work Institute and Demos. Istanbulite living in London. Currently on maternity leave but still checks here! https://asliatay.substack.com/
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asliatay.bsky.social
Our report on tackling economic inactivity is finally out and it’s one we’ve been working on for a while.🥳

The key takeaway? Flexibility, autonomy, and support during the first year after ill health onset are game changers for keeping people in work.

A ~long~ thread to unpack our key findings🧵
A report cover titled "Stemming the Tide: Healthier Jobs to Tackle Economic Inactivity."
Authored by Asli Atay, Rebecca Florisson, George D. Williams, Alice Martin, and Stavroula Leka. Published in December 2024.

The background is teal with a wave-like design in lighter green at the bottom. The top right corner features the Work Foundation logo, and the bottom left corner includes the logos for the Centre for Organisational Health & Well-Being and Lancaster University.
Reposted by Asli Atay
annieirvine.bsky.social
The Health Foundation has published new analysis on mental health trends among working age people and invited me to share some thoughts. Taking a more holistic approach to understanding capacity for work seems to be at the heart of it: www.health.org.uk/features-and...
Unravelling the rise in mental health-related inactivity
Dr Annie Irvine on why we need for a much more holistic approach to understanding capacity in order to tackle mental health-related inactivity.
www.health.org.uk
Reposted by Asli Atay
asliatay.bsky.social
New Substack is out! In my latest post, I explore why Blair’s call to avoid "medicalising the ups and downs of life" risks missing the bigger picture: the systemic mental health crisis in our workplaces and its connection to bad jobs. Let me know what you think!

open.substack.com/pub/asliatay...
Tony Blair’s ‘Tougher’ Message Misses the Real Crisis: Bad Jobs and Mental Health
Workplace Mental Health Starts with Autonomy and Flexibility in Job Design
open.substack.com
asliatay.bsky.social
New Substack is out! In my latest post, I explore why Blair’s call to avoid "medicalising the ups and downs of life" risks missing the bigger picture: the systemic mental health crisis in our workplaces and its connection to bad jobs. Let me know what you think!

open.substack.com/pub/asliatay...
Tony Blair’s ‘Tougher’ Message Misses the Real Crisis: Bad Jobs and Mental Health
Workplace Mental Health Starts with Autonomy and Flexibility in Job Design
open.substack.com
asliatay.bsky.social
I’m at the launch of the Digital Dialogues report at Tech UK. The findings reveal that technology is augmenting and complementing work but also highlight challenges for workers, including new skill demands, risks of work intensification, and digital surveillance.
asliatay.bsky.social
This was brutal 🙈 #universitychallenge
Reposted by Asli Atay
workfoundation.bsky.social
However, we also find that employers are struggling to respond. More than three in five employers (65%) acknowledge the value of occupational health services, but only 37% provide these services. In addition, less than half of employers (48%) offer flexible working arrangements.
Reposted by Asli Atay
workfoundation.bsky.social
[email protected] continues that the first year after illness is pivotal – 4.2% of workers leave their jobs within the first year of a health setback. Findings also include that employees are four times more likely to leave their job if they lack flexibility following a health setback.
Reposted by Asli Atay
workfoundation.bsky.social
[email protected] shares that, since the pandemic, 2.78 million people have left the workforce due to long-term health conditions. This has far-reaching consequences – not just for individuals but also for employers and the welfare system.
Figure showing the change in economic inactivity due to long-term sickness in the UK, for people aged 16 to 64 years old, thousands.
asliatay.bsky.social
We're about to start our webinar on Healthier Jobs to Tackle Economic Inactivity. Join us to explore how we can better support people with ill health to stay in work!
workfoundation.bsky.social
Event at 2pm: explore our research on the factors for those with long-term health conditions that influence the risk of falling out of work, & what Government & employers can do.

Join @alicepmartin.bsky.social @somceo.bsky.social @asliatay.bsky.social: www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/stemming-t...
Reposted by Asli Atay
alicepmartin.bsky.social
EVENT: Join us on Thurs to explore our research on healthier jobs to tackle economic inactivity, with @asliatay.bsky.social, Nick Pahl @somceo.bsky.social & Prof Stavroula Leka, expert in workforce health

We have 100+ sign ups already, looking forward to it
www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/stemming-t...
Stemming the tide: Healthier jobs to tackle economic inactivity
Join the Work Foundation to explore new research.
www.eventbrite.co.uk
asliatay.bsky.social
"A recent Working Lives of Teachers and Leaders survey shows a big jump in respondents citing the lack of flexible working opportunities as a reason for considering leaving the state education sector in the next 12 months – up from 34% in 2023 to 47% in 2024."
www.theguardian.com/education/20...
UK teachers should be allowed to work from home, education secretary says
Bridget Phillipson insists move to marking and class preparation out of school would help stem retention crisis
www.theguardian.com
Reposted by Asli Atay
alicepmartin.bsky.social
Great to see our finding in @thetimes.com today - that half the people who leave employment due to illness do so in the first year following their decline in health. This is a critical period, requiring good sick pay, leave and adjustments
www.thetimes.com/article/why-...
Why can’t more than 800,000 job vacancies be filled?
There are four times as many people potentially able to work as there are jobs
www.thetimes.com
asliatay.bsky.social
🔈 New Substack: Hearing on the news that GDP is declining can feel abstract to many of us. I’ve been thinking about how we can make growth feel more real, so I wrote a blog exploring this, drawing on recent events, reports, and policy discussions.

open.substack.com/pub/asliatay...
Beyond the numbers: How the Government can reconnect growth with people's lives
From abstract metrics to tangible change
open.substack.com
asliatay.bsky.social
"The Tokyo Metropolitan Government will allow its staff to work a four-day week as authorities in the world’s largest city begin a radical experiment to reverse Japan’s low birth rate."
www.ft.com/content/7cc7...
Tokyo plans 4-day working week to boost births
World’s largest city begins radical experiment as it tries to tackle demographic crisis
www.ft.com
Reposted by Asli Atay
christopher-rocks.bsky.social
Great to see this report from the Work Foundation. Interesting findings on how important access to flexible working is for enabling people with health conditions stay in work.
asliatay.bsky.social
Our report on tackling economic inactivity is finally out and it’s one we’ve been working on for a while.🥳

The key takeaway? Flexibility, autonomy, and support during the first year after ill health onset are game changers for keeping people in work.

A ~long~ thread to unpack our key findings🧵
A report cover titled "Stemming the Tide: Healthier Jobs to Tackle Economic Inactivity."
Authored by Asli Atay, Rebecca Florisson, George D. Williams, Alice Martin, and Stavroula Leka. Published in December 2024.

The background is teal with a wave-like design in lighter green at the bottom. The top right corner features the Work Foundation logo, and the bottom left corner includes the logos for the Centre for Organisational Health & Well-Being and Lancaster University.
Reposted by Asli Atay
paulbivand.bsky.social
Because the policy focus has been on benefits, there has been little/no recognition that people may have been on contractual sick pay for quite a long time. This is mainly a big company thing, but given 90% plus employers are tiny, the % of employment from medium/large employers is high.
Reposted by Asli Atay
iainkporter.bsky.social
Great research/thread @asliatay.bsky.social of Work Foundation. Chimes with @jrf-uk.bsky.social/Scope report that the most significant barriers holding disabled people back from work include inaccessible, inflexible jobs lacking health-related adaptations and support: www.jrf.org.uk/work/unlocki...