Literature DB >> 21840899

An empirical investigation into health sector absenteeism.

Vivienne Walker1, David Bamford.   

Abstract

The purpose of this research was to consider why absenteeism in Health and Social Care is so high and to suggest proactive changes in organization activity to address this. The research took a multimethod approach with a quantitative emphasis; there were three parts: (i) quantitative survey questionnaire; (ii) analysis of absenteeism and related secondary data; and (iii) qualitative data from other questions in survey and discussion groups. The quantitative emphasis in the research is appropriate, given the gap identified in the literature. Perceived limitations are that the study considers just one part of the overall system. The research indicates that managers underestimate staff absence levels and almost half believe absenteeism cannot reduce. Professional managers were more negative and over half of nurse managers believed that absence could not reduce. Unless there is a systematic systemic change in organizations, which changes managers' attitudes and understanding of absence with a consequent change in activity across the absence continuum, there is no prospect of a sustained reduction in absence levels. Manager impact and role in absence management are poorly covered in research, so this research helps inform those gaps.

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21840899     DOI: 10.1258/hsmr.2011.011004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Serv Manage Res        ISSN: 0951-4848


  3 in total

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Authors: 
Journal:  J Mark Access Health Policy       Date:  2015-08-12

2.  'Nobody is after you; it is your initiative to start work': a qualitative study of health workforce absenteeism in rural Uganda.

Authors:  Raymond Tweheyo; Gavin Daker-White; Catherine Reed; Linda Davies; Suzanne Kiwanuka; Stephen Campbell
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2017-12-29

3.  The societal role of lifelong vaccination.

Authors:  Maarten J Postma; Stuart Carroll; Alexandra Brandão
Journal:  J Mark Access Health Policy       Date:  2015-08-12
  3 in total

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