This is your Member Reference Number (MRN). You’ll need to provide this when you make an appointment with an EAP counselor or contact your EAP by phone.

Anthem provides automatic translation into multiple languages, courtesy of Google Translate. This tool is provided for your convenience only. The English language version is considered the most accurate, and in the event of a discrepancy between the translations, the English version will prevail. This translation tool is not controlled by Anthem, and the Anthem Privacy Statement will not apply. Please read Google's privacy statement. If you want Google to translate the Anthem website, select a language.

Benefits with Gavin de Becker & Associates

Your EAP offers these great resources.

What Is Good Mental Health?

Good mental health, like good physical health, is important to human wellbeing. But what does it mean to be in a state of good mental health?

First, good mental health is more than just the absence of diagnosable mental illness. In fact, people with mental illness, just like people with physical illness, can cope with their disease or infirmity and have periods of relatively good health as they move toward recovery.

Second, good mental health goes beyond feelings of happiness and contentment. Positive emotions are wonderful to experience, but they are rarely a constant in life. People experience setbacks, challenges, and trauma over the course of their lives, and a realistic definition of good mental health needs to include the range of emotions people actually feel.

A better way to think about good mental health is as a form of emotional resilience. Just as a person in good physical health can be tired and have sore muscles after a period of intense physical exertion, so a person in good mental health is able to feel pain and sadness after a setback or loss, then return to emotional stability—not right away, perhaps, but in time and with support.

People with good mental health are able to

  • Appropriately express and modulate their emotions
  • Empathize with others and maintain good relationships
  • Give and accept emotional support
  • Cope with uncertainty, adverse events, and the normal stresses of life

When you are in good mental health, you are able to appreciate the good aspects of life and feel the pain of life's disappointments and losses. Except in the worst of times, you are to able work productively, contribute to your community, and realize your potential.

While people's physical health tends to get more of their attention, mental health is just as important to their wellbeing. As the World Health Organization (WHO) puts it, "Mental health is an integral part of health; indeed, there is no health without mental health."

Sources

Galderisi, S., Heinz, A., Kastrup, M., Beezhold, J., & Sartorius, N. (2015, June). Toward a new definition of mental health. World Psychiatry, 14(2), 231–233.

World Health Organization (WHO). (2018, March 30). Mental health: Strengthening our response. Retrieved September 3, 2021, from https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/mental-health-strengthening-our-response

Morgan, H. (2021, August 25). What is good mental health? (B. Schuette & Z. Meeker, Eds.). Raleigh, NC: Workplace Options.

More about this Topics

  • Treating Depression

  • Responding to a Suicidal Loved One or Friend

  • The Power of Gratitude

  • Helping Children Cope with Disaster or Trauma

  • Borderline Personality Disorder: Helping Yourself or Others

Other Topics

    • Restore Your Resilience After the Terrorist Attack (for Employees)
    • The Path to Inner Peace
    • The Mental Strength Workout
    • Self-Care: Remaining Resilient 2
    • Supporting Your Child at a Time of Conflict and Crisis (Ukraine War)
    • Recognizing an eating disorder
    • Talking about suicide
    • Optimism and Recuperation
    • Preventing Smoking
    • Exercise and Depression
    • Take My Stress Please!
    • Managing Anxiety
    • Helping Your Loved One Who Is Suicidal (Part 2)
    • Coping with the Stress of Relocation After a Disaster (Part 3): Stress in Young People
    • Mental Illness