“You Have to Make It Normal, That’s What We Do”: Construction Managers’ Experiences of Help-Offering
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants and Procedure
2.2. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Creating the Right Environment
3.1.1. Fostering an Open Culture Around Mental Health On-Site
“The stigma of mental health, no one wants to be talking about mental health, we know a lot of organisations that don’t have that openness of it’s okay to not be okay as we say”.(FG403, Environmental Health and Safety Manager.)
“Talking to them, just being friendly. You have to keep doing it. It’s constant. You have to make it normal, that’s what we do”.(FG302, Project Manager.)
“The facilities on-site are actually reasonable, like if the toilets actually work… what you’re showing is that you believe in people’s dignity working on-site. That actually leans into it, it doesn’t necessarily lead to positive mental health, but the opposite definitely leads into negative mental health”.(FG102, Health and Safety Officer.)
“It’s down to creating that kind of, almost permission that it’s okay to go for a run or you know, go out to that organised activity”.(FG303, Health and Safety Manager.)
“And that’s what we need to do, from a leadership point of view, to build that sense of everyone saying ‘let’s look after ourselves’ and knowing the company will help us out and take care of them. We can bring it into the supply chain from there”.(FG302, Project Manager.)
3.1.2. Overcoming Systemic Challenges
“The scale of the projects, it’s getting faster, and our clients want them built faster, once that pressure comes from the client to ourselves who would be a main contractor, our supply chain underneath us are feeling that pinch”.(FG403, Environmental Health and Safety Manager.)
“If you’re going to let someone, take for example the crane driver, you let him go off, everything stops. And then you’re pushing harder when he comes back, because you have a deadline to meet, so you’ve lost that time, that time doesn’t reappear anywhere, so you’re putting more pressure on people to meet stupid dates”.(FG501, Project Manager.)
“It’s up to the company to give the people the time over to be trained, and smaller companies wouldn’t do that. They would see that as a cost, they wouldn’t see that training as free”.(FG501, Project Manager.)
“There’s a lot of foreign nationals working on this site… a lot of Irish working on this site and I find sometimes they don’t mix as well as we would hope”.(FG205, Security Manager.)
“There’s a large number of the foreign guys who don’t speak English, you’re relying on an interpreter. I can’t see anyone with mental illness talking to you through an interpreter”.(FG501, Project Manager.)
“In some cultures, when you start talking it means you’re whining. It means you’re chicken, they tend to use all those words, so you just have to toughen up and put that fence up and shoulders out”.(FG206, Health and Safety Officer.)
“I think the only way you get every contractor to buy into this is if you make it part of legislation that companies need to have a mental health leader”.(FG501, Project Manager.)
3.2. Navigating the Practice of Help-Offering
“I wasn’t very confident to be honest, I had one guy who would get very agitated, eventually I got to know him and understand him, but that first day, it really frightened me. It’s a scary place at the beginning, I won’t deny it. It’s completely intimidating, even still when I meet somebody new and if they are agitated it will frighten me, because you don’t know them, you know?”.(FG402, Environmental Health and Safety Manager.)
“It’s very, very sensitive. Because if you go over to a guy and say ‘come here, are you alright?’ especially in construction, back to the macho thing, in two minutes you will be told where to go, who do you think you are? And I think in another case, a guy might actually open up to you. But I think we’re in a situation where it’s not as common as people would like it to be, where you can talk to people, you can approach people and say are you okay?”.(FG101, Safety Advisor.)
“And I think sometimes you need to be very, very careful because we are touching on a subject now where I certainly am not qualified or educated. I wouldn’t say qualified. I’m not educated in it enough, and I think before we start talking about this, you need to be sure that you don’t overstep your mark. You can certainly speak about it and talk about it and get a conversation going. But I was very aware that if I done the wrong thing…”(FG101, Safety Advisor)
“And for some mental health issues, you know, it goes beyond having a chat over a cup of tea, if this person is unwell, they need to be seen by a medical professional”.(FG203, Medic.)
“I was probably getting too involved at the very start years ago, whereas now I have my boundaries. I learned the hard way of getting too involved where I had a guy and [pause] we were searching [for him] for 2 days on one of our projects. I learned taking a step back is the most important thing and saying okay, I know my boundaries, that’s very, very crucial”.(FG403, Environmental Health and Safety Manager.)
“They’re not an actual direct employee to you. Then what does that fall into? Should he be talking with someone within his company? Do you know what I’m saying, like…. It’s a grey area”.(FG102, Health and Safety Officer.)
“Our company floats the supports to anybody that’s got our sticker on the helmet. I couldn’t stand up in front of all those hundreds of people and say we’ll mind you, but we won’t mind you”.(FG201, Health Safety and Environment Manager.)
“We can do nothing, we are powerless and there is no training in the world that is going to change if he is financially struggling, and there is no company in the world saying we are going to back him all the way. Very rarely”.(FG101, Safety Advisor.)
“We’re probably as guilty as anyone, you’re coming to a deadline and you’ve lads working around the clock like Saturdays, Sundays, full shifts, working all week without a break”.(FG502, Project Manager.)
“It’s [long and arduous working conditions] the norm, so we know no better”.(FG501, Project Manager.)
3.3. Using the Right ‘Tools for the Job’
“It’s how you approach somebody is important, and being open to them, you know if they have a red flag in their head and they want to talk about it let them see that you’re a person they could ask a question”.(FG305, Quantity Surveyor.)
“The larger sub-contractors would have invested money in it. The smaller guys don’t, they expect us to do that type of training with their guys and basically do that role for them”.(FG501, Project Manager.)
“Something that also helps, on my side at least, is going first. If you share something vulnerable about yourself, or go first, it sort of encourages the rest of the conversation, which is mostly with men”.(FG306, Project Manager.)
“We go for tea or coffee, and I would always start, and before they tell their story, I’ll tell my story very, very briefly and they open up to me straight away”.(FG403, Environmental Health and Safety Manager.)
“I grew up in an era where a lot of senior management as well as our site agents at the time were tyrants, like you wouldn’t be going near them, and you know that approach has changed big time in the last 10–15 years in the industry”.(FG304, Contracts Manager.)
“A manager now, you can have a conversation with them, go for a cup of coffee with them. 15–20 years ago that wouldn’t have happened”.(FG304, Contracts Manager.)
“We have what we used to say was the craic with the lads, but if you are one of those guys who think they are the lord almighty himself. Nobody will talk to you”.(FG101, Safety Advisor.)
“If someone comes to you with a problem and then you can tell them what their wife’s name is, or if they’ve got kids, if you can make it personal, they’ll trust you a bit more because they feel as if you know them, whereas, some people would barely even know your name on a team you know or anything about you”.(FG305, Quantity Surveyor.)
“I was very familiar with the type of person he was and I started to see him becoming kind of bit more reclusive. He wouldn’t talk to people, so I would always then just, you know, every time I see him start up a conversation. And we’d talk about anything but then gradually over time he was opening up to me and then kind of later on down the line when he found things hard, he was actually ringing me and I was talking to him then”.(FG405, Environmental Health and Safety Advisor.)
“When you know a person, it can be easier. It can be hard on the projects where it might be a new project and you mightn’t be familiar with the people, it takes some time I think, to develop a rapport with someone so that you might notice changes in their behaviour”.(FG405, Environmental Health and Safety Advisor.)
“I would have a lot of people coming to me and they’re like can you not report this to anybody and this type of attitude. I say ‘you’re here with me, it’s completely confidential unless it is a medical emergency’, we need to maintain that barrier of confidentiality”.(FG203, Medic.)
4. Discussion
4.1. Implications for Practice and Future Research
4.2. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Roche, E.; O’Donnell, S.; Richardson, N. “You Have to Make It Normal, That’s What We Do”: Construction Managers’ Experiences of Help-Offering. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2025, 22, 581. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22040581
Roche E, O’Donnell S, Richardson N. “You Have to Make It Normal, That’s What We Do”: Construction Managers’ Experiences of Help-Offering. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2025; 22(4):581. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22040581
Chicago/Turabian StyleRoche, Emilie, Shane O’Donnell, and Noel Richardson. 2025. "“You Have to Make It Normal, That’s What We Do”: Construction Managers’ Experiences of Help-Offering" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 22, no. 4: 581. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22040581
APA StyleRoche, E., O’Donnell, S., & Richardson, N. (2025). “You Have to Make It Normal, That’s What We Do”: Construction Managers’ Experiences of Help-Offering. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 22(4), 581. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22040581