Absence culture needs urgent reform

UK manufacturers are doing more to tackle the growing problem of long-term employee absence* but believe that their efforts are being frustrated by lack of adequate support from the National Health Service.
New research published today (March 1 2004) by IRS Employment Review and EEF, the manufacturers’ organisation, based on 896 manufacturing workplaces employing almost 200,000 people, shows that although long-term absence accounts for just 5.7% of absence cases, it represents almost 70% of the total time lost from work.

Companies are responding to rising concerns over cost and employee well-being in a number of ways. Over 83% of companies say that they offer rehabilitation to employees on long-term sick leave, almost a third are engaged in programmes to improve their long-term absence management and firms draw support from a mix of in-house (19.2%) and external occupational health services (36%).

However, companies feel that the services offered by the NHS and General Practitioners (GPs) are failing to support their efforts. While GPs help to manage long-term absence in almost two-thirds (64.9%) of sites surveyed, only one in ten (9.7%) employers consider that GPs provide the most effective means of support.

The NHS’s failure to provide fast access to services such as physiotherapy affects almost half of companies surveyed (46.4%) and presents the single greatest barrier to successful rehabilitation for 16% of firms. Apart from the fundamental issue of the absent employee’s health condition, only employee resistance to taking up rehabilitation presents a greater single barrier (16.4%).

EEF’s Chief Medical Adviser, Dr Sayeed Khan said:

"Long-term sickness absence is moving higher up the agenda and while firms are responding, they need greater support.

"There is a fundamental problem around the lack of training of GPs in occupational health and the difficulties they face when balancing their role as the employee’s advocate and in providing evidence-based medical guidelines. Greater efforts need to be made to improve relationships and understanding between employers, GPs and other health professionals.

"The mindset and culture of sickness absence and rehabilitation will not suddenly change, and there will always be employers and employees who will not participate. But those willing to begin to knock down the barriers will be taking a step towards a healthy, happy and productive workforce and a business that is both successful and sustainable."

The full results of the survey are available in the new issue (794) of IRS Employment Review (www.irsemploymentreview.com), published by LexisNexis UK.

Other key findings:

• A median of 4.56 days per employee was lost to absence in 2002, equal to 2% of available working time; 5.7% of absences is long term.

• Cost is the main driver behind efforts to improve management of long-term absence in more than a third of companies (39.1%) with rising concern over employee well-being the driver in one in four (21.4%).

• Four in 10 (40.1%) managers surveyed report that they have experienced more long-term absence cases due to stress in the past five years. Three in 10 cite other mental health illnesses such as depression and anxiety as the cause.

• Other significant causes of long-term sickness absence that have increased in the past five years include: non-work-related accidents and injuries

(21.1%); surgery (18.6%); heart problems (18.5%); and work-related accidents and injuries (16.5%).

• Employers do not believe line managers take responsibility for managing long-term absence but six in 10 believe that the site managers are good

at tackling absence.

• Rehabilitation, when undertaken, is successful – resulting in the return of employees to their previous jobs in most cases.

• Employers report a host of current initiatives in the rehabilitation area, focusing on recruiting more occupational health support, new policies and procedures, earlier intervention in individual cases and working with insurers to build return to work into insurance services.

• Only half (53.1%) of surveyed workplaces have written policies covering long-term absence and rehabilitation. However, more than eight in 10 (83.4%) employers offer rehabilitation to employees on long-term sick leave.

• Typical rehabilitation involves a combination of a phased return to work and modified duties, supported by regular reviews involving the employee, their line manager, personnel and occupational health (usually externally provided).

• A phased return to work is viewed as the most effective element of rehabilitation, while the greatest barrier to successful rehabilitation is the health condition of the absent employee.

• Employers strongly favour tax relief for their rehabilitation efforts but there is little support for any new legislation covering rehabilitation.

IRS Employment Review managing editor, Mark Crail said:

"Long-term absence is disruptive and costly to any business so it is vital to get people back to work – particularly in a tight labour market. Employers are proving that they do care about for their workforce; almost a quarter report a rising concern for employee well-being. Furthermore, (97.9%) believe that maintaining contact with employees on sick leave is one of the most effective ways of managing long-term absence.

"Given the growing sense of urgency about the need to get employees back to work, the government intends to provide a national rehabilitation service that, it hopes, will signal a "step change" in public policy. Rehabilitation, when undertaken, is successful - resulting in the return of employees to their previous jobs in most cases. The survey shows that there must be closer collaboration between health professionals and employers, if workers are to get back to their jobs as quickly as possible."

ENDS

Notes for editors

• *Long-term absence = employees absent for more than four weeks

• The full survey is published in IRS Employment Review available from customer services on 020- 8662 2000, price £30 or can be found on www.irsemploymentreview.com.

The survey was conducted jointly by IRS and EEF, the manufacturers’ organisation, in September 2003, using EEF’s membership database and with the help of the organisation’s chief medical adviser and its regional offices. Participants were asked to complete the postal questionnaire with details for their site only, recognising that, although some are part of larger organisations, approaches to long-term absence management can vary from site to site. The 896 survey respondents employ 179,725 staff in total, and have a median (range-midpoint) workforce of 118, with individual workplaces ranging in size from six to 15,917 employees. The sample is skewed heavily towards smaller sites – 76.6% of respondents stating their number of employees employ fewer than 250 people and only 2.3% employ 1,000 or more staff. Useable responses were obtained from 896 sites in the following EEF regions and business activities

EEF, the manufacturers' organisation, has a membership of 6,000 manufacturing, engineering and technology-based businesses and represents the interests of manufacturing at all levels of government. Comprising 11 regional Associations, the Engineering Construction Industries Association (ECIA) and UK Steel, EEF is one of the UK's leading providers of business services in health, safety and environment, employment relations and employment law, manufacturing performance, education, training and skills and information and research.

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