UK Sick days at work hit highest level for 10 years - Workers are taking more days off due to stress, Covid and the cost-of living crisis, research suggests.

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By Vishala Sri-Pathma
Business reporter


UK workers are taking more sick days than at any point in the last decade, research suggests.

Staff took on average 7.8 sick days in the past year, up from 5.8 before the pandemic, the Chartered Institute for Personnel and Development (CIPD) found.

One teacher who is off sick told the BBC her work environment was now "toxic" due to high pressure.

The trade group said the rise was a "worry" and blamed stress, Covid and the cost-of-living crisis.

These conditions were having "profound impacts on many people's wellbeing", it added.

The research analysed rates of absence in more than 900 organisations, representing 6.5 million employees.

It was conducted by the CIPD, in partnership with Simplyhealth, a healthcare company that provides outpatient support.

The study found that minor illnesses were the main reason for short-term absences, followed by musculoskeletal injuries and mental ill health.

Meanwhile, more than a third of organisations also reported Covid-19 was still a significant cause of sick days.

Staff on long-term sick leave tended to blame mental health issues, musculoskeletal injuries or conditions such as cancer and stroke.

Sally (not her real name), a teacher from the South East, is currently taking time off due to stress caused by the "toxic environment" at her school.

"It became unmanageable this week," she told the BBC. "Comments from management say 'all the schools are like this. Everyone is under pressure'. But it seems to be an excuse - that we've got to bear it."

She said she had wanted to speak to colleagues for support but there wasn't time as everyone was under pressure.

Changes in working culture since the pandemic coupled with the cost-of-living crisis have left some employees feeling disengaged and stressed, the CIPD said.

Working from home could also present an issue for staff that lived alone or had limited social contact.

Rachel Suff, senior employee wellbeing adviser at the CIPD, said that public sector sick days were almost double than that of the private sector.

"Absence has always been higher in bigger organisations - and that goes for private sector as well - and there are a lot of large organisations in the public sector," she told the BBC.

"Also, there are an awful lot of front-line roles [in the public sector]," she said, citing extra pressures on people working in organisations such as the NHS.

Most of the organisations surveyed said they offered sick pay, while around half had a strategy to improve staff wellbeing. However, the CIPD said rates of absence were still rising and employers needed to do more.

Ms Suff from the CIPD said employers needed to better manage the causes of workplace ill-health and intervene early to stop issues escalating.

"It's important that organisations create an open, supportive culture where employees feel they can come forward," she added.

Dr Audrey Tang, a psychologist and broadcaster, told BBC Radio 5 Live there was "a mismatch of understanding from people right at the top" about what workers needed.

"Often, quick, short-term fixes such a lunchtime yoga or lunch time ice cream vans are not what people need," she said.




The Industrial Revolution and its consequences.
 
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Often, quick, short-term fixes such a lunchtime yoga or lunch time ice cream vans are not what people need," she said.
I hate this. ‘Yeah we are working you into an early grave but we have a free mindfulness app. Have you attended the session on worklife balance ? You’ve got the option of lunchtime or 9pm.’
 
Well no shit. Corpos have given up all pretenses of acting like their workers are anything other than disposable economic units that can be worked until they are broken and then coldly tossed aside

Repeat after me.

The corpo is not your friend
You will not trust the corpo
You will use all your PTO
You will use all your sick days
You will not adopt the corpo as your surrogate family
You will call in sick every once in a while and you will be happy
 
I think it's more that people just don't give a toss anymore. They've lost their religion, beliefs, sense of humour and all sense of hope and wonder.

Walk through any business and you see it on the faces of 80% of the people. There are myriad reasons for it all that I won't sperg about but there are many causes combining into this perfect storm.

Sick days are up, not for the reasons mentioned in the article, but because taking a sick day makes no difference anymore. Too poor treat yourself to a decent life even if you work? Treat yourself to more 'you' time with sickies.
 
Wish some fuckers in my industry would get this memo. Everyone keeps getting sick as a dog from people who show up at offsites ill.

Companies acting like people were faking sick for a long time made it so people came to work contagious. Covid, at least for some industries and areas, made it so that people were expected to definitely not come in if they had a cold, and those norms are mostly sticking around.
 
Sick days are up because people don't want to work every day at their stupid jobs anymore. It's not the coof in 2023, it probably isn't even the fact that our paychecks are worth jack compared to just a few years ago, it's because people are simply miserable and their dead end jobs or meaningless careers don't help matters. They have no God and the values that they thought they held are starting to collapse under their own inconsistencies. That is, at least, what I've been seeing in people in my own life.
 
How does the "cost of living crisis" link with people not going to work by choice?

Sick days are up because people don't want to work every day at their stupid jobs anymore. It's not the coof in 2023, it probably isn't even the fact that our paychecks are worth jack compared to just a few years ago, it's because people are simply miserable and their dead end jobs or meaningless careers don't help matters. They have no God and the values that they thought they held are starting to collapse under their own inconsistencies. That is, at least, what I've been seeing in people in my own life.
High IQ.

I hate this. ‘Yeah we are working you into an early grave but we have a free mindfulness app. Have you attended the session on worklife balance ? You’ve got the option of lunchtime or 9pm.’
People work less hard now than any time in history.

Nothing would make people want to work. Even a janitor can easily afford a flagship iPhone and 75" Bravia OLED, what exactly are people even working for?

In the past people worked to support families and children. Now everyone is incel and permavirgin because everyone has been conditioned to be dissatisfied by any partner less than a pro model, most people choose to stay alone, rather than date someone in their league.

There's literally no motivation to work hard. Not related to workplace mindfulness sessions etc.
 
How does the "cost of living crisis" link with people not going to work by choice?
Because if you work 60 hours a week to make ends meet, you can justify going to work.

If you work 60 hours a week and can't make ends meet, you need no possessions, only more free time, then that free time becomes more valuable than anything money can buy, then what's the justification to work?

Plus, people are moving between jobs faster and more frequently than i've ever known. Those who do and are on a 1 month notice period, will have at least a few days off and a long weekend, if they even show up for the last week/last day.
 
People work less hard now than any time in history.
I dont think that’s the issue at all, and I think it may not even be true.
But anyway. I would bet you as well that people who do actual physical work like bricklaying or painting or putting roads down are among the less depressed. When you can see what you did and see what a difference it makes people tend to be less depressed at their jobs. Do action x, see outcome y. Job done, that road painting looks good.
Sitting still at a desk doing mind numbing, incredibly mentally stressful work that seems to have zero impact is what people hate. Doing that work for a pay packet that buys less each month is shit. Doing it while they see the people who own the place at best shagging models on a yacht, or more likely doing stuff to society to make it worse, is what gets people.
I work mainly desk based and I hate it. I get literally hundreds of emails a day. I constantly have to react react, rather than having the time to think. Very little can be automated.
My thought processes are fragmented by this. I’m responsible for tens of millions of dollars worth of work and hundreds of people but I’m not high enough up to make any real positive changes to their lives. I’m constantly under resourced and over stressed and everyone is constantly pissed off, trying to cut corners and make things faster and cheaper in an industry where that’s a disaster.
I no longer believe my work has a wider benefit (ok some of it does but it’s mainly just making shareholders money.)
I hate it. I’m paid about half of what the American side is and taxed far more.
It’s not about hard physical work. It’s about how utterly soul crunching the work is
 
What's the white/brown/black teardown?
 
Well no shit. Corpos have given up all pretenses of acting like their workers are anything other than disposable economic units that can be worked until they are broken and then coldly tossed aside

Repeat after me.

The corpo is not your friend
You will not trust the corpo
You will use all your PTO
You will use all your sick days
You will not adopt the corpo as your surrogate family
You will call in sick every once in a while and you will be happy
You will log into work, do nothing and get paid for it
You will use company time to take care of yourself by playing video games and hobbies
You will bullshit managers into thinking you're doing more work than you are
 
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