News release
3 November 2010 - NR 39/10
Health and safety body warns of increased presenteeism during
time of austerity
Bosses must beware of the signs of
‘presenteeism’ among workers as austerity measures begin to bite
across the public and private sectors - a leading health and safety
organisation has warned.
With this year’s National Stress Awareness Day (Wednesday 3
November) falling ahead of a period of cost-cutting across
Government departments, public bodies and suppliers, the
Institution of Occupational Safety and Health (IOSH) says cases of
‘presenteeism’ – where employees are less productive because of
suffering ill-health at work – could increase as workers strive to
show their worth.
This advice follows a poll*1 earlier in the year which revealed
that nine out of every ten public sector workers have been to work
when they were too ill to go. One in every three of those did so
because they did not want to let people down or give colleagues
extra work.
IOSH’s Head of Research and Technical
Services Dr Luise Vassie said: “Presenteeism can become more common
during times of economic struggle and job cuts. At the moment we
are seeing a situation where some people who may be in fear of
losing their jobs are taking on extra work – this could cause them
to experience symptoms of stress and when they get ill they feel as
though they cannot take time off.
“What we want to avoid is this dangerous
catch 22 where a downward spiral develops. We want managers, in
partnership with their colleagues in HR, to recognise this real
issue, act upon it, and take steps to help their employees
recover.”
Mental health problems can seriously affect performance with
increased error rates, poor decision-making, loss of motivation and
commitment and conflict.
UK figures*2 also show that mental health-related presenteeism
accounts for one-and-a-half times as much working time lost as
sickness absence, with an estimated £605 cost per employee
annually. This amounts to £15.1billion nationally - over half of
the total £26bn lost each year due to sickness absence, staff
turnover and reduced productivity.
Dr Vassie added that organisations which helped to tackle stress
in the workplace could reap a number of benefits, including reduced
sickness absence costs.
“Companies often find that when they show
they care, employees’ commitment to work rises and performance and
productivity improves; staff turnover slows down, customers are
more satisfied as they notice improved attitudes,” she said.
Released last week, Health and Safety Executive (HSE) Statistics
2009/10 from the Labour Force Survey revealed there had been an
estimated 435,000 cases of stress, anxiety and depression that were
put down to work.
Dr Vassie added: “People often don’t pay as
much attention to their mental health when compared to their
physical, because it’s not as easy to identify when something’s not
quite right.
“There are telltale signs of someone who is
stressed – headaches and eye strain, inability to sleep, rapid
shifts in mood, apathy, anxiety, oversensitivity. It can even cause
loss of appetite, comfort eating and also increases the likelihood
of drinking, smoking and recreational drug taking.”
- Ends -
Words: 492
Notes for editors:
IOSH is the Chartered body for health and safety professionals.
With more than 37,000 members in 85 countries, we’re the world’s
biggest professional health and safety organisation.
We set standards, and support, develop and connect our members
with resources, guidance, events and training. We’re the voice of
the profession, and campaign on issues that affect millions of
working people.
IOSH was founded in 1945 and is a registered charity with
international NGO status.
*1 TUC study, ‘The truth about sickness absence’ (www.tuc.org.uk/extras/absencerates.doc)
revealed in March 2010:
• Within the last month, more than one in five public
sector workers have been to work when they were really too ill to
do so (21 per cent).
• A further 41 per cent (compared to 36 per cent of private
sector workers) have gone into work poorly when they should have
stayed off sick within the last year, though not in the last
month.
• Only one in ten public sector workers (11 per cent) have
never been to work when they were too ill to go.
• One in three public sector workers cited their reason for
going into work when unwell was 'people depend on the job I do and
I didn't want to let them down' (33 per cent).
• Others were concerned about the impact their absence would
have on colleagues: 'I didn't want to give my colleagues extra
work' (18 per cent of public sector workers compared with 12 per
cent of private sector workers said this was the case).
*2 Figures taken from The Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health study
http://www.centreformentalhealth.org.uk/pdfs/nehin_mental_health_at_work_business_case_michael_parsonage.pdf
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