Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 84 total)
  • 'absence from work' markers
  • Drac
    Full Member

    The NHS historically has higher-than-average levels of staff sickness absence compared with the workforce generally.

    Maybe because private companies sack people too easily?

    Ambulance trusts have the worst figures, for some unfathomable reason..

    I can’t possibly think why.

    Stoner
    Free Member

    took me an extra 40s to remember how to screen shot on the chromebook to extra the graph from a pdf. I’m a pro. 🙂

    Stoner
    Free Member

    I can’t possibly think why.

    you’ve answered your own question – it’s because the malingerers can’t be sacked as easily, obviously!

    Or does your argument only work in one direction?

    Drac
    Full Member

    Thanks Stoner, so in reality not really that much higher than the UK average.

    No why would it work one way? We very much support staff through sickness offering them various treatments and options at a cost to assist them back to work. Also due to the nature of the job there is many absences which means they can’t be at work, with limited alternative duties staff have little choice at times.

    martinhutch
    Full Member

    I can’t possibly think why.

    Coffee and doughnut toxicity.

    Thanks Stoner, so in reality not really that much higher than the UK average.

    Quite a bit, really. I’m seeing a UK average of 2%ish, and an NHS average of around 4%. There’s obviously good reasons for it – stressful, exposure to pathogens, and staff are generally clever enough not to come in when they’ve got the raging shits.

    Stoner
    Free Member

    errrmmmm.

    For the same period (2013) that is covered by the two charts, NHS absence averages, say, 3.9%.

    UK Labour force absence rate (assuming 50:50 male/female employment, which we know it isnt, but it tends the sum to your favour) averages say 2.1%.

    So NHS absence is 85% higher than the national average.

    Drac
    Full Member

    Wrong service.

    Drac
    Full Member

    The national annual sickness absence rate has fallen each year between 2009-10 to 2011-12. It fell from 4.40 per cent in 2009-10 to 4.16 per cent in 2010-11 to 4.12 per cent in 2011-12. It rose to 4.24 per cent in 2012-13 and then fell to 4.06 per cent in 2013-14. It rose to 4.25 per cent in 2014-15.

    So at 3.9% it was lower that national which says 4.06%?

    gonefishin
    Free Member

    Hmm possible reasons why the NHS might have higher than average sickness rates. It can’t possibly be anything to do with the fact that the staff come into contact with more ill people than the general public. It also can’t possibly be anything to do with making sure that when they are ill that they don’t pass things round the other patients thereby making them worse.

    Nope it can’t be anything like that they must all be skivers and malingerers!

    Stoner
    Free Member

    The “National” in that context I think means “Nationally” across all NHS trusts and sectors. Not entire national workforce.

    Stoner
    Free Member

    Nope it can’t be anything like that they must all be skivers and malingerers!

    youre just no fun gonefishin.

    Yeeeesssss, martin and I are teasing Drac. Noooooooo, we dont genuinely believe the NHS are full of skivers and malingerers. Yesssssssss, there are real data illustrating a substantial variation between NHS absence and the rest of the UK workforce. Sooooooooo let’s look at reasons for the variation rather than knee-jerk “must protect the NHS from criticism” auto-response.

    Although I have to go and look for a new mower right now.

    aphex_2k
    Free Member

    I’ve had 5 days in the last 2 weeks. 2 last week and 3 this week. Horrible constipation, bloody agony FWIW. Possibly due to Champix tablets?

    Drac
    Full Member

    “National” in that context I think means “Nationally” across all NHS trusts and sectors. Not entire national workforce.

    Ohhhhhh! 😳

    must protect the NHS from criticism” auto-response.

    Or stop the pointless mentioning of the NHS in a critical manner? 😀

    uselesshippy
    Free Member

    It makes sense to me NHS workers are off sick more. They deal with sick people, so come in to contact with disease, so have more chance of contacting illness.
    And they’re under massive stress while being overworked.

    Stoner
    Free Member

    Or stop the pointless mentioning of the NHS in a critical manner?

    it comes naturally.

    l8r.

    Drac
    Full Member

    Peace out!

    gofasterstripes
    Free Member

    martinhutch
    Full Member

    I used to work for the NHS. In management, so my absence rate was puny compared with you frontline skivers. 😀

    <Cue pantomime villain hissing at NHS Managers>

    It’s OK though, my role was a waste of space and resources, so I, errr, managed myself out.

    footflaps
    Full Member

    UK Labour force survey

    It’s s shame there isn’t a corresponding set of data for actual illness rates, as it could just be falling because employers are getting tougher on legitimate absenteeism, or because people are skiving less, or because people are less ill…

    andy4d
    Full Member

    @sadexpunk. The trouble with managers applying common sense is it upsets people. Why should one illness be OK yet another not OK. Managers are not qualified doctors so often have to go with a one size fits all approach or else they get accused of discriminating against xy or z. Whether you are off sick because of a cold or a triple heart by pass you are still off work. What type of absences should be OK and what should not…hard to judge.

    br
    Free Member

    It makes sense to me NHS workers are off sick more. They deal with sick people, so come in to contact with disease, so have more chance of contacting illness.
    And they’re under massive stress while being overworked.

    Nope, we were an admin function.

    tbh 5h1t management is my normal answer, and a seemingly bizarre approach where everyone knows that how they are working/managing is wrong but they just carry on doing it ‘cos everyone else does.

    ourmaninthenorth
    Full Member

    At an individual level the best way to deal with this sort of bureaucratic idiocy is to vote with your feet and find a job elsewhere.

    Northwind
    Full Member

    Something really weird happened to me… I was off enough times to start The Process, and my boss sat me down and said “Are you alright? Anything we can do? You don’t look too good tbh, I think you came back too soon, bugger off home”. What’s that all about?

    I have fond memories of the bank of scotland process, where I got told I should do more to avoid illness, after I fractured my hip. Then I went back a bit too early, hurt it, had to take more time off, got pulled up again for “too many incidences of illness”. Everyone in the company knew how to work the numbers- never be off for one day, avoid patterns, basically all ways to ensure that even legitimately ill people end up skiving because the system will punish them if they don’t.

    Drac
    Full Member

    Something really weird happened to me… I was off enough times to start The Process, and my boss sat me down and said “Are you alright? Anything we can do? You don’t look too good tbh, I think you came back too soon, bugger off home”. What’s that all about?

    That’s how it’s supposed to work.

    ScottChegg
    Free Member

    Suggest she needs some time off because of stress caused by the written warning.

    Which didn’t happen.

    Does that make it a psychosomatic illness?

    br
    Free Member

    At an individual level the best way to deal with this sort of bureaucratic idiocy is to vote with your feet and find a job elsewhere.

    Yep, didn’t accept a contract extension. 🙂

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    OP she should look for another job, she can be fired with little option for come back with less than 2 years service

    FWIW in Singapore some locals treat sick days as extra holiday, one of my team told me in advance which days she was going to be sick and always produced a doctors note when she came back 😯

    wwaswas
    Full Member

    In legal terms a ‘verbal’ warning is nothing – it’s your boss saying ‘I’ve had to have this conversation with you, this is what happens if I have to do it again’.

    It’s either in your HR file or it isn’t. If it is then it’s written.

    sadexpunk
    Full Member

    just an update now that the letter has arrived……

    blahdyblah absence is higher than the standard we expect at the Society, issuing you with an Absence Improvement Warning…..remain on file for 6 months…..within next 6 months onitor attendance….if future absence levels are more than one occasion a further warning could be issued for frequent absence…. you have right to appeal…..

    so….my feelings are that she should appeal. shes always said throughout the years how people take the p1ss there with nothing said, weeks off at a time, 2 days back, weeks off again, playing the system. there is obviously the chance that others are being spoken to behind the scenes and she doesnt know, but as a manager came into the shop to interview her there, then she thinks she would have known if this happened to others.

    yeah, first world problems and all that, especially today, but i still feel a sense of injustice for her and think she should appeal on the grounds of inequality of treatment.

    interested in others opinions

    thanks

    bruneep
    Full Member

    Go off with stress caused by the letter. That’ll teach em.

    chewkw
    Free Member

    FunkyDunc – Member

    each occasion being a couple of days with a cold or something like.

    There’s your problem, taking time off without being ill ! [/quote]
    This one ^^^ 😮

    stevious
    Full Member

    I had one of these once and replied asking for written guidance of what I should do if I do fall ill and where to draw the line in terms of symptoms, etc. Basically worded it as if I was awfully keen to avoid tripping any more sanctions but was powerless to prevent getting ill. Eventually got an apology from HR for being too heavy handed with the policy.

    andy4d
    Full Member

    Don’t fancy your chances of appeal on your reasons. Reason for appeal is usually a process not followed or punishment is unduly harsh not that you don’t like the outcome. The onus would be on your wife to prove she is treated different and they will just say ‘she is not, where’s your proof. We cannot discuss others due to confidentiality’. Don’t worry about others, if your wife has passed the marker just accept it and move on.

    andy4d
    Full Member

    @Bruneep. Going off with stress is not the answer. All that may do is rack up another absence and lead to an escalation of the warning. Not clever or helpful to the OP.

    sadexpunk
    Full Member

    i would imagine it was tongue in cheek mate 🙂

    also not expecting anything from an appeal, just a show of ‘not laying down and accepting a warning just cos shes an easy target’ type of thing.

    I had one of these once and replied asking for written guidance of what I should do if I do fall ill and where to draw the line in terms of symptoms, etc. Basically worded it as if I was awfully keen to avoid tripping any more sanctions but was powerless to prevent getting ill. Eventually got an apology from HR for being too heavy handed with the policy.

    i like this. much more ‘me’ 🙂

    thanks

    dannybgoode
    Full Member

    Trouble is these days companies have to treat everyone the same – the pisstakers, the grafters whoever.

    They have to follow the script and in all likelihood if your wife is a good employee it’ll be a case of ‘well we had to call this interview but off you go’. They can’t take a common sense approach becuase if they want to come down on a pisstaker and that person finds out your wife (for example) never even had a formal interview they can kick up a fuss.

    FWIW Mrs Danny has a Bradford trigger of 60 and is currently scoring at somewhere in the region of 770 – she has just had her stage one interview and been told not to worry, just going through the motions etc.

    rwamartin
    Free Member

    Stevious’ solution is the way to go.

    Tom_W1987
    Free Member

    Work for a American Biotech company, they get really really unbelievably hacked off if you come in with so much as a sniffle. I got lectured for coming in once!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Presenteeism

    A pharmacy should know better, you are potentially coming into contact with immune compromised patients.

    andy4d
    Full Member

    Tom not every absence is due to a contagious disease. And maybe she works on the perfume counter in the pharmacy………or should absenteeism be encouraged just because you work in a pharmacy. It’s the fact you are out that is the issue. Not the reason. Things are not black and white.

    project
    Free Member

    A pharmacy should know better, you are potentially coming into contact with immune compromised patients.

    and what a great place to pass on viruses and sickness, then sell the customer an expensive over the counter medicine and get their freinds in and infect them, a good way of increasing profits for a pharmacy.

    If your wifes sick shes sick, just ignore them and appeal and as above ask what thier definaition of being sick is.

Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 84 total)

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