Employee retention is no longer just an HR challenge — it’s a business imperative. One of the most overlooked drivers of retention today is access to mental health care.
HR leaders are navigating rising burnout, disengagement, and unscheduled absences — often without clear insight into whether their benefits are playing a part. At the same time, brokers are hearing a shift from employers, “Bring us solutions that help people stay.”
Mental health is no longer a perk or a cultural talking point. It needs to be a core benefit—one that directly influences engagement, productivity, and retention, and one employers increasingly expect to measure.
Employees rarely leave abruptly. More often, disengagement builds when stress goes unmanaged and care is difficult to access.
Burnout is a leading predictor of voluntary turnover and declining performance¹. When mental health needs go unmet, productivity suffers and disengagement begins long before an employee resigns².
Traditional approaches, such as underutilized EAPs or long wait times for in person therapy, often fail to meet employees where they are. The result is a pattern many organizations recognize too late:
By the time these signals are visible, retention risk is already high.
Forward thinking employers are reframing mental health as a foundational part of their benefits strategy.
A true core benefit is one employees can rely on during real moments of need. To support retention, mental health benefits must be:
Stigma remains one of the biggest barriers to mental health utilization³. Employees often hesitate to seek care if it feels visible, disruptive, or risky.
Digital first behavioral health helps remove these barriers by offering confidential, flexible access that fits into daily life³. When care is easier to use, employees are more likely to seek support earlier—before stress turns into burnout or disengagement⁶.
For HR leaders, this leads to higher utilization and earlier intervention¹³. For brokers, it enables more meaningful conversations focused on outcomes—not just coverage.
This is where therapist guided digital behavioral health programs like Meru Health and First Stop Health stand out—combining privacy, access, and clinical support for working adults⁸⁹.
When mental and physical care are easy to access:
Retention improves when employees feel supported in real time — not left navigating a fragmented healthcare system under stress.
Organizations are increasingly expected to prove the value of mental health investments.
Common metrics include:
When measured this way, mental health shifts from a “soft benefit” to a data backed retention strategy. Studies show well designed behavioral health investments can generate measurable ROI through reduced costs, improved productivity, and stronger workforce stability⁵.
For HR Leaders
For Brokers & Agents
Mental health as a core benefit isn’t the future of retention.
It’s the expectation.
For HR Leaders
🔗 Explore digital behavioral health with Meru Health
https://www.paisc.com/products-services/self-funded-health-benefit-administration/meru-mental-healthcare
For Brokers & Agents
🔗 Explore virtual care solutions with First Stop Health
https://www.paisc.com/products-services/self-funded-health-benefit-administration/telehealth
Discover how Meru Health and First Stop Health work together to reduce stigma, improve access, and support employee retention⁸¹⁰.
¹ Burnout, disengagement, and turnover risk
• https://www.multiresearchjournal.com/admin/uploads/archives/archive-1738235251.pdf
• https://www.jacr.org/article/S1546-1440%2820%2931016-4/fulltext
² Productivity loss, absenteeism, and ROI of behavioral health
• https://www.novaonehealth.com/blog/bh-roi
• https://blog.bestpracticeinstitute.org/measure-mental-health-roi/
³ Workplace stigma and mental health utilization
• https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/leading-for-wellness/202511/eliminating-mental-health-stigma-at-work
⁴ Virtual care access and reduced care disruption
• https://www.anthem.com/employer/the-benefits-guide/virtual-care-supports-health-needs-across-specialties-and-geographies
⁵ ROI, productivity gains, and employer outcomes
• https://www.deloitte.com/us/en/insights/topics/talent/workplace-mental-health-programs-worker-productivity.html
⁶ Engagement, psychological safety, and reduced turnover
• https://blog.bestpracticeinstitute.org/mental-health-programs-reduces-turnover/
⁷ Employer expectations and workforce stability trends
• https://www.thecampbellinstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Research-Outlook_Campbell-Institute_Employee-Turnover_CE.pdf
• https://blog.ifebp.org/the-new-look-of-virtual-care-whats-right-for-employers-and-plan-sponsors/
⁸ Meru Health – employer solutions and outcomes
• https://www.meruhealth.com/who-we-serve/employers
• https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/meru-health-puts-100-of-fees-at-risk-302084293.html
• https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT04738084
⁹ Meru Health – clinical outcomes vs. traditional treatment
• https://www.meruhealth.com/blog/meru-health-vs-traditional-treatment-clinical-outcomes-comparison
¹⁰ First Stop Health – virtual care employer impact
• https://www.firststophealth.com/telemedicine-benefits-employers
¹¹ First Stop Health – expanded access and ecosystem partnerships
• https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/first-stop-health-joins-the-paretohealth-ecosystem-expanding-access-to-virtual-primary-care-for-small-and-mid-market-employers-302631259.html
Compliance & Disclosure Notice
This content is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, clinical guidance, or a guarantee of outcomes. Benefit design, utilization, cost savings, and retention results vary by employer population, plan design, and implementation. Any references to productivity, engagement, or ROI are based on aggregated research or vendor reported outcomes and should not be interpreted as projections or promises.