
Did you know that up to 84% of employees in the United States feel pressured to go to work when they are sick*?
That 69% of US employees have not been offered employer sponsored vaccines or other preventative care*?
Last year, the Public Welfare Foundation conducted a survey that found 1 in 6 employees had been disciplined, fired, or otherwise penalized for being sick. And this was before the swine flu!
By the way, aside from chronic health conditions, the #1 reason why employees miss work is the flu. So a good portion of these statistics represent people with flu struggling to keep a job while also fighting a fever.
With the advent of the swine flu, corporate policies haven't improved. They've become even more draconian and punitive. Nurses are told they can't work if they are sick, but are also punished for taking sick leave. This kind of paradoxical sick leave policy is rampant in the work place. It abuses employees in the name of 'profit' and completely disregards data from studies showing employees who come to work sick cost companies money. A 2004 study from Emory University calculated the costs of employees who work while sick at $180 billion dollars a year. That's enough to bail out a couple of Wall Street banks!
Currently, Congress is actually contemplating laws to mandate paid sick leave for employers with more than 15 employees. The Healthy Families Act (S 1152/HR 2460)would provide for 7 paid sick days annually that employees could use to care for themselves or family members. For those of us in cushy cubicles who qualify for FMLA, this isn't much, but for 48% of the workforce this law is the only thing standing between them and unemployment. If you want to show your support for a federal sick leave policy, you can add your name to the Moms Rising paid sick leave petition or contact your representatives directly.
Psssst! Did you see the polls in the right sidebar over there? Take some time to vote! We want to know what's happening where you work and what you think.
*These statistics are from an Angus Reid Strategies survey.
Photo credit: geotrac via istockphoto



