But your job offered it which means it's ok to use during working hours and get paid for it. If my job offered free lunch you can be damn sure I will eat it during my work day.
Read the fine print too, a lot of these "mental health counseling services" have carve outs that stipulate that they can pass along data about your sessions to third parties (like your employer.) Most of them aren't health care professionals so health care law doesn't apply.
Everything HR does is for the benefit of the company. They do not do anything to genuinely help employees. You are a replaceable cog and the moment they decide you're not useful, you will be tossed out. Never trust them or the structures they put in place.
Good HR people see their employees as tools and they know that tools need special care to work properly. Yes, they only do it because it's best for the company.
I got lucky and two HR members in the four big companies I've worked for that were like that. I guess it isn't the norm.
It sounds like they want you to do it during working hours or else they wouldn't offer those times. It's a service offered by your job so it could be interpreted as a work-related function and therefore you should get paid for utilizing it.
I mean, just schedule the appointment, put it on your work schedule, and ask that doctor (or whatever you call them) for a note for work. That's what I do.
If any of my reports told me they booked an appointment through the health care we provided and it was during the work day I'd just say okay, mark it out on your calendar as busy so I don't bug you or expect anything from you during that time. If they need to account for all their time like some roles, bill it as admin time.
No idea where you are or what the labour laws or union situation are. But where I work, a consultation like that is a doctor's appointment and can therefore be taken as medical leave during working hours.
Based on the text in your image i assume that you live in the Netherlands. I would advise you to discuss this with your employer. As you are unable to plan a needed psychiatric appointment during working hours you have the right to take some short leave time for that.
As a supporter of getting professional help like therapy, I get kinda frustrated at the whole process.
My company has two options: a in-company therapist and TalkSpace.
The in-company therapist is a nice lady but I don't like that her boss is HR, where I have the most problems with. She's also technically challenged and uses the company storage to save reports. You know who else has access to the company storage? IT. And I chill with those guys and absolutely know what they can see.
I had two really good therapists who quit TalkSpace in a year. But then, five people who were more like guidance counselors. They didn't have any credentials in their profile outside of basic social work, and didn't give me anything better than (ugh) an AI therapist.
Honestly I have to pay out of pocket for therapy now.
I've heard people call these mental health days. At least to friends. Probably not to bosses. It's good to take one once in a while (if you can) and just chill. I occasionally do so.
I'll never forget my younger brother saying that in NYC people consider it really weird if you're not in therapy. I didn't comment, but that kind of bugged me. I'm all for de-stigmatizing therapy, but that made it sound like it's some kind of flex to tell people you're in therapy...?
My workplace offers a mental health benefit similar to this, we inform HR that we've scheduled a mental health appointment during work, tell our manager that we're stepping away for an hour, and then return to work after the appointment. It would be a good idea to ask someone in your company how to use your benefit.
I'll be the first person to remind you that HR is not your friend, but this is exactly what they exist for
Most likely it's just a data harvesting scheme so they can see if you can mentally take being overworked (they don't care and will work you to a slow death regardless), isn't capitalism just wonderful :3
Haha, thanks for the laugh. If I was, I either wouldn't need a psych appointment, or at least it wouldn't cause any issues.
I know better than that what my place in this world is, though. But thanks for at least having a heart. That puts you above everyone I have to interact with on a daily basis.
Not sure how it holds up legally... But I am very strongly of the option that If my health care is tied to my employment, then anything healthcare related is work related.
I only make calls for this shit on the clock. I haven't pushed not using sick time yet, but I will once I get the WFH shit sorted.
Everybody who keeps saying "just go" seems to be assuming that OP works in an office job where you can just come back and finish your work after your appointment.
What if they're an air traffic controller, they're operating factory equipment, monitoring a nuclear reactor, etc. Some jobs require a person to be present and attentive. Now they have to talk to their manager, find someone to cover for them, etc. Mental health treatment should be easily available without having to jump through hoops. I understand their frustration.
Book the time as an appointment or consultation and just go. If your direct line manager makes a fuss, tell them it’s a doctor’s appointment. If you’ve got far enough that you recognise that you need help, just go ahead and do it.