Interviews 5 min read

Burnout, blood pressure & brain fog: why your career needs a health check

Written By Dr Claire Gillvray, Welbeck Cambridge (2026) Burnout is no longer a personal problem, it’s an organisational risk. The …

Written By Dr Claire Gillvray, Welbeck Cambridge (2026)

Burnout is no longer a personal problem, it’s an organisational risk. The average time off work for burnout-related sickness is around three months¹, meaning a single case can cost a business tens of thousands of pounds in lost productivity, temporary cover, and disrupted team performance. But the impact goes beyond absence, including:

  • Reduced creativity and problem-solving
  • Higher staff turnover
  • Increased errors, conflict, and presenteeism (being at work but operating below capacity)

 

Many organisations assume burnout is simply the result of excessive workloads. But the evidence tells a different story, people can burn out even in roles that are not objectively “overworked.” That’s because burnout is fundamentally about chronic mismatches between a person and their workplace, not just long hours.

Why Well-being Drives Performance and Retention

Employees who feel supported, valued, and able to work sustainably are more engaged and productive. Well-being is not soft, it’s strategic.

When staff feel well:

  • Cognitive performance improves
  • People collaborate more effectively
  • Problem-solving and creativity increase
  • Engagement and loyalty rise

 

Organisations that invest in targeted well-being strategies see lower turnover and stronger retention². And in a labour market where skilled staff are scarce, retention becomes a major competitive advantage.

Rethinking Burnout: Insights from the Maslach Burnout Model

Christina Maslach’s research shows that burnout arises from six key mismatches between employee and workplace:

  1. Workload – but not only volume, also emotional and cognitive demands
  2. Control / Autonomy – feeling able to influence how work is done
  3. Reward / Recognition – effort being acknowledged
  4. Community – connection, support, psychological safety
  5. Fairness – transparent, equitable processes
  6. Values alignment – feeling your work matters

 

This means someone can work long hours and not burn out if the other factors are healthy. Conversely, someone working “normal” hours can burn out if they lack autonomy, feel undervalued, or work in a fractious team.

This is why well-being cannot be reduced to yoga classes, fruit bowls, or ad-hoc mindfulness sessions. The foundation of burnout prevention is workplace design, not token activities.

How Managers Shape Workplace Health Culture

Managers are the single biggest influence on workplace well-being. Their behaviour sets the tone for what is normal and acceptable.

Healthy leadership looks like:

  • Not emailing or messaging out of hours (or scheduling messages to send later)
  • Taking annual leave, and actively encouraging the team to do the same
  • Recognising success regularly, not just annually
  • Running walking meetings, which can stimulate creativity and reduce stress
  • Normalising boundaries, breaks, and recovery time

 

Managers model the culture that people follow. A team can only be as healthy as the environment around it.

Evidence That Healthier Teams Boost Profits

Research consistently shows that teams with high well-being:

  • Produce better quality work
  • Have fewer sick days and lower turnover
  • Show higher innovation and adaptability
  • Deliver stronger customer outcomes

 

Every £1 invested in evidence-based workplace wellbeing returns between £4 and £6 in improved retention, performance, and reduced illness-related costs³.

Healthy employees = healthy organisations.

Using the Six Pillars of Lifestyle Medicine at Work

Lifestyle medicine offers a framework for supporting whole-person wellbeing that can be integrated into workplace culture:

  1. Nutrition: Provide nutritious options at meetings/events, review onsite food choices
  2. Physical Activity: Encourage movement breaks, walking meetings, active commutes
  3. Stress Management: Build in predictable workflows, encourage breaks, reduce digital overload
  4. Sleep: Remove the culture of late-night emails; respect circadian rhythms
  5. Social Connection / Community: Strengthen belonging through community-building
  6. Avoidance of Harm: Reduce workplace toxicity, overuse of stimulants, and unhealthy coping norms

 

Workplaces that support these pillars help staff maintain resilience, energy, and cognitive performance.

Practical Steps for Organisations: What to Do Next

A. Assess what your workforce actually needs

Not generic well-being offerings, targeted, evidence-based interventions built on real data.

B. Look at workplace factors first

Before offering individual support, examine workload, autonomy, recognition, fairness, and team dynamics.

C. Support managers

Train them in healthy leadership, communication, and boundary-setting.

D. Embed well-being into everyday work

Make it normal, not an “extra”, to take breaks, celebrate wins, and move during the day.

E. Build a healthy culture that prevents burnout before it takes hold

Prevention is more effective, more humane, and far cheaper than the cost of lengthy burnout recovery.

Ultimately, burnout is not inevitable, it’s preventable. When organisations prioritise health as seriously as performance, they create workplaces where people can think clearly, work sustainably, and thrive long term.

About Welbeck Health Partners

https://welbeckhealthpartners.com/welbeck-cambridge/

Welbeck Health Partners was founded by a group of leading healthcare specialists from the UK and USA who strongly believed that better care was possible, and that an entirely new sort of organisation was needed to deliver this.

Through working in partnership with expert teams of doctors, architects, and operations experts, our flagship centre, Welbeck London, was created. Welbeck is now a private healthcare facility like no other, with eighteen specialties all under one roof all uniquely created to put the patient first, as well as our own Surgery Centre. Our flagship building continues to grow, with further specialties planned to open later on this year and beyond, as well as regional centres to expand our offering beyond London.

¹ https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1359432X.2021.1948400

² https://www.cipd.org/globalassets/media/knowledge/knowledge-hub/reports/2023-pdfs/8436-health-and-wellbeing-report-2023.pdf

³ https://work.life/blog/workplace-wellbeing-programs-470-percent-roi-returns/

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