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Stuart Gentle Publisher at Onrec

ëPresenteeismí on the rise as an estimated quarter of UK employees admit to working when ill

Businesses need to address ëpresenteeismí, as well as absenteeism says Robertson Cooper

Businesses need to address ëpresenteeismí, as well as absenteeism says Robertson Cooper

Survey data from 39,000 UK workers presented by leading business psychology company, Robertson Cooper, has shown that a quarter of the people in the sample have recently struggled into work to show their bosses they are present, despite feeling ill. The research is part of the companyís annual report on employee engagement and well-being at work in the UK.

This sample of employees working in the UKís public and private sectors rated their health and productivity levels over the past three months using Robertson Cooperís employee engagement and well-being assessment tool, ASSET. They were also asked if they had taken time off during this period and all the results were analysed in order to estimate rates of ëpresenteeism.í Presenteeism is a complex issue, but one of its key features is when people feel compelled to turn up to the office when they are too ill to work and should be at home.

The results of the research were striking. Only 50% of UK workers in the sample reported good health, with the remainder describing their health as just ëalrightí or ëpoorí. However, despite not being at peak fitness, 26% of these employees reported taking no sick leave at all during their last three months at work. Unsurprisingly, this group also reported lower productivity than their ëhealthierí colleagues - with just 38% claiming their productivity was at 90 per cent or above, compared with 51% of workers in the ëhealthyí group. In particular, they reported poorer work relationships, a worse work-life balance and more work overload than their healthy counterparts.

Robertson Cooper warns that when employees come to work ill simply to show their faces and work unproductively the implications for company performance, and indeed the economy as a whole, are damaging and costly. Recent influential government reviews have provided support for this argument, including last weekís report into mental health from the National Institute of Clinical Excellence.

Professor Ivan Robertson, Managing Director at Robertson Cooper commented, ìPresenteeism in the workplace has a number of causes, one of which is often related to feelings of job insecurity. Recently, this feeling is likely to have been inflamed as a result of the recession. People feel under pressure to be at work; they believe that by showing their faces even when they are ill, they are demonstrating their commitment, despite being unproductive. Businesses canít afford to ignore this problem.î

ìTo prevent presenteeism, managers should reward people for the work they deliver, not the hours they put in. People should not feel obliged to work long hours to show their commitment and itís desirable if genuinely sick workers feel like they should take time off for everyoneís benefit. In the long-term investing in the health and well-being of workers pays dividends in terms of improved employee engagement and productivity. It delivers considerable savings over and above those caused by driving down absenteeism. Most employers focus on reducing absenteeism levels and the associated costs, but often forget that tackling presenteeism is also a significant opportunity to reduce costs and improve productivity. Get both right and the impact on the business can be profound.î

Robertson Cooper is calling for a national debate looking at how businesses can find the right balance between absenteeism and presenteeism. This can be tricky, because there is a natural tension between the two issues - when one goes down the other is likely to go up. A certain level of both is inevitable, but understanding the relationship and finding the right level of each for specific organisations is the difficult part.