The Australian sickie


A recent national survey by a private health and wellbeing provider found that Australians are 30 per cent more likely to take a sick leave day than their counterparts in the UK. We can’t put this one down to the Brits feeling more positive about the Royal family or their performances on the Olympic sports arena. There is something else at play here. Oftentimes it’s the motive of the person on sick leave.

Australians take an average of nearly nine sick leave days a year and it’s averaged just under a fortnight per annum for many years, compared to just under seven days in Great Britain. The survey also shows if you work in a telco, a utility, a call centre, a tourism operator, or an outsourced provider the sick leave utilisation jumps to between 10 and 13 days a year on average.

Whilst physical or mental illnesses are randomly distributed in their weekly occurrence, the act of taking sick leave does not distribute evenly through the working week. A few years ago a senior HR director forum involving this writer checked their organisations’ sick leave records and found the following set of facts.

The lowest probability for occurrence of a sick leave day is Wednesday. The probability that a sick leave day will be registered on a Monday was three times that of a Wednesday, and Fridays came in at two and a half times the more modest Wednesday levels. Then come Tuesday and Thursday with sick leave probability more than one and half times that of a Wednesday.

With working weeks that include a public holiday (on other than a Wednesday) the above probabilities go up again for ‘sandwich sickies’ – those days caught between a weekend and a public holiday.

Furthermore, sick leave incidence is higher in industries where there are quota requirements on outputs, and the workplace tasks are repetitive, menial or stressful.

Sick leave incidence is also higher in workplaces where the local leadership culture is a ‘command and control – micro-management’ style. In poor culture workplaces, presenteeism compounds these factors. People who are genuinely sick come into work and spread their viruses, in part to protect their sick leave credits for a rainy day.

It is interesting that until recently one call centre business, Salesforce, bucked the industry stereotype and was Hewitt employer of the year for about five years in a row. Any visitor to Salesforce would have seen workstations decorated like a teenager’s bedroom, with the occupants happily ploughing through their demanding daily quotas. This seems to suggest that a concerted effort towards workforce engagement can have an effect on the incidence of sick leave, whatever the industry.

Genuine sick leave taking usually reflects, say, a week for the annual bout of influenza, plus another day for an unrelated ailment. That’s six days a year, not nine. My thesis from all this data is that Australia bears about three unwarranted sick leave days a year, for our 11 million workers. That number works out at 33 million working days lost, which at average weekly earnings of $66,000 per annum, results in a total cost to the economy of around $10 billion annually.

Addressing the sickie malaise is a case of ‘eliminate the negative, and accentuate the positive’ as the song goes.

Positive strategies involve targeting workplace cultures and leadership styles. The more inspired work colleagues are and the greater respect accorded to them. The higher will be their attendance and productivity rates. Chase out the command and control leaders to a corporate Jurassic Park where they feel more comfortable and relevant.

Negative strategies can also be effective. Scheduling routine return-to-work meetings with employees returning from bouts of sick leave is a useful technique. It’s also worth requiring medical certificates for absences of more than half a day rather than two days consecutive absence as many workplaces still do. If privacy settings allow, employers can easily follow absent workers on Facebook or read what they are tweeting, which is a legitimate and potentially instructive practice. Come down firmly on proven malingerers, and send coughing and spluttering ‘presentee’ workers home – they’re a danger to themselves and others.

Another strategy is to reduce sick leave entitlements to ten days a year on average or fewer, with perhaps up to thirty days extendable leave for those experiencing an authenticated severe or life threatening illness. These are policy guidelines that match typical sickness incidence and will protect almost all people, most of the time.

There was a recent case of a worker who took a sick day to organise a BBQ on Facebook. Unfortunately for him, his then boss was a Facebook friend. Now that boss is neither a boss nor a friend, and the industrial court turned down the worker’s appeal for reinstatement. Don’t let a minority of your colleagues barbecue your sick leave policy. That may mean a few who play with this fire may get burned. When that happens, others will not miss the message.

Peter Wilson AM is the national president of the Australian Human Resources Institute

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Rick Rebeiro
Rick Rebeiro
12 years ago

I think the Australia and UK comparisons must be viewed with some caution. The company that provided the data is an Australian organisation who state that they can reduce workplace absenteeism. What better way than to demonstrate that Australian sick leave usage is high. I’m certainly not saying that the data is inaccurate, but (a) do UK workers have the same universal access rights to sick leave that Australian workers do? And (b) does that include carer’s leave or only personal sick leave? The Company I work for employs over 200 permanent staff, and the average annual personal leave (ie… Read more »

Kerrie
Kerrie
12 years ago

I am wondering what your views are on pooling sick leave by employees so that there is an allocation ‘gifted’ that can be drawn by other staff members who become ill and need more days off than they have owing ?

Peter Wilson
Peter Wilson
12 years ago

That’s a very interesting idea Kerrie. A matter of genuine concern in the workplace occurs when a close colleague becomes seriously ill, and runs out of sick leave. If people allocated sick leave credits to a pool from leave not normally taken by them in a year, that may significantly increase the costs of doing business. However if voluntary allocations came from their average utilization in the past few years, which may not have been taken in the current year – that could work. Probably the better outcome is for an employer to exercise discretion by granting further sick leave… Read more »

Dean Serra
Dean Serra
12 years ago

Loving the conversation. As an “unpublished” piece of research it is an effective conversation starter but sadly little more. Your article and its feedback highlights the environment HR finds itself in today. HR is mostly reactionary and there is little if any ‘new’ approaches to absence management being applauded in the workplace. Just as a means to further discussion. Sick leave on Mondays may be resultant from the simple fact that weekends are a time when workers are in contact with far more people socially – the gestation period for most viral infections being 24 hrs therefore Mondays are logically… Read more »

Patricia
Patricia
12 years ago

Good article. In our organisation we have noticed that there is an increase in Carer’s Leave due to the care of aging parents (most with terminal illness) and the aging employee’s themselves (with spouses being ill). The young employees (up to say late 20s) either take minimum or no sick leave at all. Our organisation has the policy of providing medical certificate for SL before and after public holiday, RDO and annual leave and this has worked well. The only soft spot I have in my heart for Australian workers taking the number of sick leave that they do, is… Read more »

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The Australian sickie


A recent national survey by a private health and wellbeing provider found that Australians are 30 per cent more likely to take a sick leave day than their counterparts in the UK. We can’t put this one down to the Brits feeling more positive about the Royal family or their performances on the Olympic sports arena. There is something else at play here. Oftentimes it’s the motive of the person on sick leave.

Australians take an average of nearly nine sick leave days a year and it’s averaged just under a fortnight per annum for many years, compared to just under seven days in Great Britain. The survey also shows if you work in a telco, a utility, a call centre, a tourism operator, or an outsourced provider the sick leave utilisation jumps to between 10 and 13 days a year on average.

Whilst physical or mental illnesses are randomly distributed in their weekly occurrence, the act of taking sick leave does not distribute evenly through the working week. A few years ago a senior HR director forum involving this writer checked their organisations’ sick leave records and found the following set of facts.

The lowest probability for occurrence of a sick leave day is Wednesday. The probability that a sick leave day will be registered on a Monday was three times that of a Wednesday, and Fridays came in at two and a half times the more modest Wednesday levels. Then come Tuesday and Thursday with sick leave probability more than one and half times that of a Wednesday.

With working weeks that include a public holiday (on other than a Wednesday) the above probabilities go up again for ‘sandwich sickies’ – those days caught between a weekend and a public holiday.

Furthermore, sick leave incidence is higher in industries where there are quota requirements on outputs, and the workplace tasks are repetitive, menial or stressful.

Sick leave incidence is also higher in workplaces where the local leadership culture is a ‘command and control – micro-management’ style. In poor culture workplaces, presenteeism compounds these factors. People who are genuinely sick come into work and spread their viruses, in part to protect their sick leave credits for a rainy day.

It is interesting that until recently one call centre business, Salesforce, bucked the industry stereotype and was Hewitt employer of the year for about five years in a row. Any visitor to Salesforce would have seen workstations decorated like a teenager’s bedroom, with the occupants happily ploughing through their demanding daily quotas. This seems to suggest that a concerted effort towards workforce engagement can have an effect on the incidence of sick leave, whatever the industry.

Genuine sick leave taking usually reflects, say, a week for the annual bout of influenza, plus another day for an unrelated ailment. That’s six days a year, not nine. My thesis from all this data is that Australia bears about three unwarranted sick leave days a year, for our 11 million workers. That number works out at 33 million working days lost, which at average weekly earnings of $66,000 per annum, results in a total cost to the economy of around $10 billion annually.

Addressing the sickie malaise is a case of ‘eliminate the negative, and accentuate the positive’ as the song goes.

Positive strategies involve targeting workplace cultures and leadership styles. The more inspired work colleagues are and the greater respect accorded to them. The higher will be their attendance and productivity rates. Chase out the command and control leaders to a corporate Jurassic Park where they feel more comfortable and relevant.

Negative strategies can also be effective. Scheduling routine return-to-work meetings with employees returning from bouts of sick leave is a useful technique. It’s also worth requiring medical certificates for absences of more than half a day rather than two days consecutive absence as many workplaces still do. If privacy settings allow, employers can easily follow absent workers on Facebook or read what they are tweeting, which is a legitimate and potentially instructive practice. Come down firmly on proven malingerers, and send coughing and spluttering ‘presentee’ workers home – they’re a danger to themselves and others.

Another strategy is to reduce sick leave entitlements to ten days a year on average or fewer, with perhaps up to thirty days extendable leave for those experiencing an authenticated severe or life threatening illness. These are policy guidelines that match typical sickness incidence and will protect almost all people, most of the time.

There was a recent case of a worker who took a sick day to organise a BBQ on Facebook. Unfortunately for him, his then boss was a Facebook friend. Now that boss is neither a boss nor a friend, and the industrial court turned down the worker’s appeal for reinstatement. Don’t let a minority of your colleagues barbecue your sick leave policy. That may mean a few who play with this fire may get burned. When that happens, others will not miss the message.

Peter Wilson AM is the national president of the Australian Human Resources Institute

Subscribe to receive comments
Notify me of
guest

47 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Rick Rebeiro
Rick Rebeiro
12 years ago

I think the Australia and UK comparisons must be viewed with some caution. The company that provided the data is an Australian organisation who state that they can reduce workplace absenteeism. What better way than to demonstrate that Australian sick leave usage is high. I’m certainly not saying that the data is inaccurate, but (a) do UK workers have the same universal access rights to sick leave that Australian workers do? And (b) does that include carer’s leave or only personal sick leave? The Company I work for employs over 200 permanent staff, and the average annual personal leave (ie… Read more »

Kerrie
Kerrie
12 years ago

I am wondering what your views are on pooling sick leave by employees so that there is an allocation ‘gifted’ that can be drawn by other staff members who become ill and need more days off than they have owing ?

Peter Wilson
Peter Wilson
12 years ago

That’s a very interesting idea Kerrie. A matter of genuine concern in the workplace occurs when a close colleague becomes seriously ill, and runs out of sick leave. If people allocated sick leave credits to a pool from leave not normally taken by them in a year, that may significantly increase the costs of doing business. However if voluntary allocations came from their average utilization in the past few years, which may not have been taken in the current year – that could work. Probably the better outcome is for an employer to exercise discretion by granting further sick leave… Read more »

Dean Serra
Dean Serra
12 years ago

Loving the conversation. As an “unpublished” piece of research it is an effective conversation starter but sadly little more. Your article and its feedback highlights the environment HR finds itself in today. HR is mostly reactionary and there is little if any ‘new’ approaches to absence management being applauded in the workplace. Just as a means to further discussion. Sick leave on Mondays may be resultant from the simple fact that weekends are a time when workers are in contact with far more people socially – the gestation period for most viral infections being 24 hrs therefore Mondays are logically… Read more »

Patricia
Patricia
12 years ago

Good article. In our organisation we have noticed that there is an increase in Carer’s Leave due to the care of aging parents (most with terminal illness) and the aging employee’s themselves (with spouses being ill). The young employees (up to say late 20s) either take minimum or no sick leave at all. Our organisation has the policy of providing medical certificate for SL before and after public holiday, RDO and annual leave and this has worked well. The only soft spot I have in my heart for Australian workers taking the number of sick leave that they do, is… Read more »

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