Relationship between sickness absence and length of service
Open Access
- 1 January 1973
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Occupational and Environmental Medicine
- Vol. 30 (1) , 64-70
- https://doi.org/10.1136/oem.30.1.64
Abstract
Pocock, S. J. (1973).Brit. J. industr. Med.,30, 64-70. Relationship between sickness absence and length of service. A longitudinal study of 454 new employees in one factory showed that sickness absence rates in the first six months of service were less than half the rates during the next four and a half years. This is presumed to be partially caused by the lack of company sick pay during this initial period. A cross-sectional study of 1 263 men in employment in 1964 showed that men with long service (e.g., over 10 years) are less frequently absent than the rest whereas days lost was not associated with length of service. This is thought to relate to the increased job satisfaction and greater responsibility of long-service employees. It is also shown that an employee's sickness absence experience in the first year of employment can be used as an indicator of future absence liability. However, it is more reliable in the prediction of the `frequently sick' than the `severely sick' employee. Previous studies of the effect of length of service on sickness absence are also discussed.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Absenteeism of shift and day workers: A study of six types of shift system in 29 organizationsOccupational and Environmental Medicine, 1972
- Short-term absence from industry: I Literature, definitions, data, and the effect of age and length of serviceOccupational and Environmental Medicine, 1970
- Individual Variations in Sickness AbsenceOccupational and Environmental Medicine, 1967
- Changes in Accidents and other Absences with Length of ServiceHuman Relations, 1955
- NEW TECHNIQUES FOR THE ANALYSIS OF ABSENTEEISM DATABiometrika, 1954
- An Analysis of Absence Under a Scheme of Paid Sick LeaveOccupational and Environmental Medicine, 1952
- Some Effects of Paid Sick Leave on Sickness AbsenceOccupational and Environmental Medicine, 1952
- Putting Absence Records to UseAmerican Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1951
- Practical Applications of the Statistics of Repeated Events' Particularly to Industrial AccidentsJournal of the Royal Statistical Society, 1927