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Mental Health & Wellbeing

Mental Health in Security: Why 2026 is Forcing the Industry to Confront Cognitive Strain as an Operational Reality

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2 Minute Read

Mental Health Awareness Week tends to prompt familiar conversations across industries about wellbeing, stress, and resilience. But within the security sector, those conversations increasingly feel inseparable from the operational environment itself.

Across cybersecurity operations, frontline security, and risk functions, mental health is no longer sitting neatly in the “wellbeing” category. It is becoming part of how the industry understands performance, risk, and sustainability. In 2026, the conversation is shifting, slowly, but noticeably from awareness to operational acknowledgement.

Recent research into Security Operations Centre (SOC) environments published in 2026 highlights just how embedded pressure has become in frontline cyber roles. The study found that more than 70% of SOC practitioners reported symptoms consistent with burnout, with many also indicating they were considering leaving the profession due to sustained workload intensity and cognitive fatigue.

What stands out in the findings is not just the scale of burnout, but the framing. It is not positioned as an individual resilience issue. Instead, it is linked directly to how SOC environments function: continuous alerting, high-volume incident response, and expectations of constant availability.

In other words, the conditions required to run modern security operations are also the conditions driving cognitive strain. That pressure is not limited to operational teams. 

The Proofpoint Voice of the CISO 2025 report, still the most recent global benchmark available in 2026, found that burnout indicators remain widespread among security leaders, with many reporting sustained organisational pressure linked to rising threat complexity and resource constraints.

While the report focuses on CISOs, the implications extend beyond leadership. Pressure at the top of the function rarely stays there. It filters through escalation paths, on-call structures, and operational expectations, shaping the tempo at which security teams are required to operate.

The result is a compounding effect: leadership strain and operational strain reinforcing one another rather than existing in isolation. At the same time, wider workforce data is reinforcing that burnout is not unique to security, even if it is intensified within it.

The Mental Health UK Burnout Report 2026 highlights that workplace stress remains a persistent issue across the UK workforce, with mental health-related absence continuing to affect a significant proportion of employees. Younger workers, in particular, are increasingly impacted by sustained pressure and workload intensity.

For the security industry, this matters because it places sector-specific challenges within a broader context. The industry is not experiencing an isolated problem, but a more acute version of a wider workforce pattern, shaped by high stakes, constant vigilance, and time-sensitive decision-making.

What is becoming harder to ignore in 2026 is the relationship between mental health and operational performance. In security environments, cognitive fatigue does not remain abstract. It shows up in decision-making under pressure, escalation judgement, and the ability to process and prioritise large volumes of information in real time.

In cybersecurity in particular, where human intervention still plays a central role in detection and response, this becomes an operational consideration rather than a personal one.

The language is starting to shift accordingly. Mental health is increasingly being discussed not only in terms of wellbeing, but in terms of operational resilience.

There are early signs of change in how organisations are responding. Some are beginning to integrate workload and cognitive load considerations into SOC design, including shift patterns, escalation structures, and leadership training. Others are starting to acknowledge burnout indicators as early warning signals of operational strain rather than purely personal issues. But across the sector, the approach remains inconsistent. In many cases, mental health is still treated reactively, something addressed once absence, attrition, or fatigue becomes visible at scale.

The emerging evidence suggests that this lag between recognition and action is becoming harder to sustain. The security industry is built on the idea of vigilance, the ability to anticipate, withstand, and respond to risk. Increasingly, that definition is being tested from within.

Because as threat environments become more complex and always-on by design, the resilience of the people operating within those environments is becoming inseparable from the resilience of the systems themselves. Mental Health Awareness Week simply brings that into focus. The underlying reality is already operational.

 

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Karyee Lee

Karyee Lee

Karyee Lee is a Content Executive for the Safety & Security Event Series, contributing to the digital content strategy and audience engagement across a diverse range of online platforms through The Security Briefing, Workplace Unplugged, and Pro Integration Insider. Passionate about bringing industry professionals together, Karyee develops engaging digital content and supports initiatives that keep industry audiences informed and connected.

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