Trends in death, disablement, and sickness absence in the British Post Office since 1981.
Open Access
- 1 February 1982
- journal article
- review article
- Published by BMJ in Occupational and Environmental Medicine
- Vol. 39 (1) , 1-10
- https://doi.org/10.1136/oem.39.1.1
Abstract
The Post Office occupational health service was established in 1855. Unique epidemiological records of sickness absence, medical retirements, and deaths for 90 years have been extracted from annual reports. The stability of the death rate is striking, but the male sickness absence series is consistent with three periods of roughly constant rates, viz 7.6, 10.0, and 13.1 calendar days a year with increases in level coinciding with the two world wars. By contrast with general experience, Post Office absence has not shown a rising trend in the past 30 years. An examination of the relation between medical retirement and sickness absence rates shows that a strongly negative correlation has reversed to be a strongly positive one since the second world war. The major changes in diagnostic causes of absence, retirements, and deaths are described.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stress in Relation to Premature Medical RetirementOccupational Medicine, 1979
- Occupational and regional associations of death, disablement, and sickness absence among Post Office staff 1972-75.Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1976
- A combined Survey of Chronic Disability in Industrial EmployeesOccupational Medicine, 1970
- Premature Disablement and Death among Post Office WorkersJournal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1954