Blog

4th June, 2025

Health and welfare reform – will work, work?

The government has made its stance on health and welfare clear. The overarching narrative underpinning the Department for Work and Pensions’ (DWP’s) green paper on welfare reform, published in March 2025, is ‘good work is good for health and being out of work can worsen health’.

Coupled with the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care Wes Streeting’s recent comments that an over-diagnosis of mental health conditions is preventing people from working, it is evident that the government sees work as a key component of the welfare state.

This marks a distinct shift in how work, health and welfare have historically interacted in policymaking. Where once the welfare system was seen primarily as a safety net, it is now being recast as a springboard that supports individuals back into the labour market.

The government recognises that something has shifted in the labour market post-Covid-19. There has been a 45% increase in health-related benefits claimants since 2019-20 and more than 9.3 million people out of work. There are swathes of statistics which demonstrate that Britain’s workforce has not fully recovered from the pandemic and the current level of sickness and absenteeism is unsustainable.

Given the scale of the issue, the government has sought to identify how improving health outcomes might support people into work and enable them to stay there. Ideas such as offering weight loss jabs, dubbed ’jabs for jobs’, were floated at the end of last year. This gives a clear signal that the government is keen to encourage people back into the workplace and is open to non-conventional methods of doing so.

While DWP consults industry and businesses on its planned welfare reforms, an opportunity has arisen for those focused on supporting the government’s vision for work and welfare. Employers should be prepared to play a larger role in supporting the workforce to remain engaged in the labour market. This offers significant opportunities for occupational health providers who can support employers to promote the health and wellbeing of their staff.

Schemes such as mental health and wellbeing programmes will become increasingly common in employment offerings as businesses take on a growing role in a broader, work-led approach to welfare. Occupational health providers who can help fill this gap between welfare, health and long-term employment are well placed to help facilitate the government’s policy objectives.

Reducing economic inactivity is a key priority for the government in its mission to kickstart growth. By implementing supportive workplace schemes and collaborating with private occupational health providers, employers can not only improve individual outcomes but also contribute to broader societal and economic resilience.

The question now for policymakers is exactly how occupational health providers can support businesses to deliver on the government’s objectives for welfare reform. Ministers, civil servants and parliamentarians are keen to understand the art of the possible and how they can work with providers to support workers to remain as active participants in the UK’s workforce.

Please contact Lauren Atkins (lauren.atkins@gkstrategy.com) if you would like to discuss occupational health and the government’s welfare reforms in more detail.