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Home Page > Cost Of Absence > CIPD Employee Absence Survey - July 2004
This is a summary of the key points of the report. Should you prefer to view the report in it's entirety, you can find it here
The average level of sickness absence among survey participants is 4.0% or 9.1 working days per employee (based on a working year of 228 days).
The figure is 0.1% higher than the 2003 survey average of 3.9%.
Public services organisations have the highest average level of sickness absence at 4.7%, with the private services sector having the lowest at 3.4%.
Almost two-thirds (61%) of absence is accounted for by spells of fewer than five days.
Nearly four in ten (39%) respondents report a decrease in absence levels over the previous year, compared to 31% reporting an increase.
Changes in the method of recording absence, changes in workforce composition, tightened policies and changes to workload are reasons for increased absence, while tightening policies for reviewing attendance is a major influence on falling absence levels.
The most important cause of absence for both manual and non-manual workers is minor illness, followed by stress for non-manual employees and back pain for manual staff.
Back pain, musculo-skeletal injuries, acute medical conditions, stress and mental ill health are the leading causes of long-term absence for manual workers, while stress and mental ill health are the leading causes for non-manual employees.
As many as 80% of employers collect information on the causes of absence.
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Stress is identified as an increasing cause of employee absence. Over half (52%) of employers surveyed have experienced an increase in workplace stress in the past year.
The survey shows that the majority of organisations are responding to the problem, with more than threequarters of organisations (77%) taking steps to identify and reduce stress-related absence.
The main causes of stress in the workplace are workload and management style/relationships at work.
Difficulties in defining and identifying stress, increasing performance targets and a lack of skills for dealing with stressed staff are identified as the main obstacles to addressing workplace stress.
The survey asked employers’ opinions on proposals to transfer the responsibility for issuing sick notes from GPs to occupational health professionals.
In all, 93% of respondents believe sick notes are issued too easily but despite this nearly two-thirds (60%) want GPs to continue to issue sick notes.
If the task is taken away from GPs, it should, in respondents’ views, be administered by NHS specialised health centres or done by private-sectoror NHS-employed occupational health professionals working with individual employers.
Almost a third of employers believe that more than 20% of absence is not genuine.
A similar proportion of respondents think between 6% and 10% of absence is not genuine.
A fifth of employers believe less than 5% of absence is not genuine.
Confidence in genuine absence is greater among organisations with fewer than 100 staff.
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The average reported cost of sickness absence is £588 per employee per year, a rise of 3.7% on the CIPD’s 2003 survey.
More than 90% of participants consider sickness absence to be a significant or very significant cost to the organisation, but only 46% monitor this cost.
Nearly nine in ten (87%) employers have a written absence management policy and three-quarters (74%) of organisations have introduced changes to their absence management policies or practices in the past two years.
Return-to-work interviews are regarded as the most effective method of managing short-term absence.
Involving occupational health professionals is seen as the most effective tool for managing long-term absence.
Nearly nine in ten employers believe that it is possible to reduce absence levels, although only 49% have set a target for this.
Almost two-thirds of public service organisations set targets, compared to 58% of manufacturing and production employers and just 33% of private services organisations.
The propensity to set targets for absence increases substantially with workforce size.
The most common type of target (sought by 57%) is a reduction to an absolute percentage of working time lost, with 40% having a 3% target figure.
In all, 43% of organisations benchmark their absence rates, with the public sector being the most likely to do so.
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