Q2 2026

One in four Britons experience a mental-health problem each year. An immediate, no-training-required response is now available to all. British offices have first aid kits to treat cuts, sprains, burns or other injuries. But if an employee has a mental-health issue that needs immediate attention, they are often on their own. New initiative Second Aid is set to change that. What first aid is for physical health, second aid is for mental health. Its QR code posters, placed next to traditional first-aid kits, provide free, instant access to structured exercises and support services to help people deal with panic attacks, burnout, conflict, stress and depression. Developed by British social entrepreneur Hakeem Javaid, Second Aid is designed to combat the UK mental-health crisis by providing early intervention. Some one in four Britons face a mental-health problem, annually. Second Aid gives people immediate stability, potentially stopping distress or anxiety escalating or becoming long-term. Users can self-administer psychological first aid, based on established techniques from cognitive load regulation, CBT and other forms of therapy. This includes abdominal breathing, emotional regulation and visualisation exercises. They can also connect directly to the Samaritans for further support. Hakeem – creator of stressreduction app HelpMeCalmDown.com, which has been used by more than 83,000 people worldwide – has added features to combat loneliness and grief, too. “I want to see Second Aid in every office in the country,” he says. “It can normalise mental-health assistance, just as first aid is normal for physical health or soap in a workplace bathroom is for hygiene”. “Stress, depression or anxiety accounted for 22.1 million lost working days in 2024/25. A lack of early mental-health care can lead to family breakdowns, loss of jobs and even suicide. This is how we fight it.” Hakeem is encouraging people to ask their HR teams or managers to put up Second Aid QR codes posters in their workplace. They are downloadable, along with stickers, from the website. Use is free for public services, nonprofits, local businesses, religious communities and the general public, with for-profit companies requiring a license, starting at £225 a year. Hakeem has also launched a petition urging government to mandate the use of Second Aid in all public buildings, schools and workplaces. Second Aid is anonymous, with no accounts, cookies or advertising. It was designed with the help of mental-health experts, but is not intended for diagnosis, treatment of severe mental illness, to replace professional help, or management of imminent risk. For more information, visit secondaid.com. New Innovation Second Aid Brings Mental-Health First Aid to the Workplace While counselling and talking therapies – whether delivered individually or jointly – may form part of the solution, access to a dedicated specialist who can provide continuity, advise on overall wellbeing, join up different aspects of the situation, and offer ongoing support between sessions is equally important. This approach ensures individuals are directed to the most appropriate support, while also taking into account wider health issues, which may not always be addressed when therapies are provided in isolation. Christine Husbands, commercial consultant, RedArc said: “When someone has real relationship issues that affect their health, they need more than just a listening ear from a kind family member, friend or colleague – as wellmeaning at that might be.” “In these situations, access to consistent, professional, clinical support can make a meaningful difference. It helps individuals to better understand their circumstances, navigate complex emotions, and take informed steps towards resolution and recovery. Without that level of support, issues can become more entrenched, with wider implications for their health, wellbeing, and performance at work.”

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