| Literature DB >> 31855145 |
Faruque Ahmed, Sara Kim, Mary Patricia Nowalk, Jennifer P King, Jeffrey J VanWormer, Manjusha Gaglani, Richard K Zimmerman, Todd Bear, Michael L Jackson, Lisa A Jackson, Emily Martin, Caroline Cheng, Brendan Flannery, Jessie R Chung, Amra Uzicanin.
Abstract
We assessed determinants of work attendance during the first 3 days after onset of acute respiratory illness (ARI) among workers 19-64 years of age who had medically attended ARI or influenza during the 2017-2018 influenza season. The total number of days worked included days worked at the usual workplace and days teleworked. Access to paid leave was associated with fewer days worked overall and at the usual workplace during illness. Participants who indicated that employees were discouraged from coming to work with influenza-like symptoms were less likely to attend their usual workplace. Compared with workers without a telework option, those with telework access worked more days during illness overall, but there was no difference in days worked at the usual workplace. Both paid leave benefits and business practices that actively encourage employees to stay home while sick are necessary to reduce the transmission of ARI and influenza in workplaces.Entities:
Keywords: United States; acute respiratory illness; illness days; influenza; organizational policy; paid leave; pandemics; productivity; sick days; sick leave; telecommute; telework; viruses; work attendance
Year: 2020 PMID: 31855145 PMCID: PMC6924903 DOI: 10.3201/eid2601.190743
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
FigureTotal enrolled and number of persons included in analyses of work attendance during the first 3 days of acute respiratory illness or influenza, United States, 2017–18 influenza season. *Valid responses are those that added up to 3 days for the question on work attendance during the first 3 days of illness (see Appendix Table 2).
Characteristics associated with having access to telework and paid leave benefits among working adults with medically attended acute respiratory illness or influenza, United States, 2017–18 influenza season*
| Characteristic | Access to telework | Paid leave benefits | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes, n = 198 | No, n = 1,164 | Yes, n = 1,074 | No, n = 282 | ||
| Age, y, median (5th, 95th percentile) | 43 (25, 61) | 41 (22, 61) |
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| Sex | |||||
| F | 119 (60) | 756 (65) | 695 (65) | 175 (62) | |
| M | 79 (40) | 408 (35) |
| 379 (35) | 107 (38) |
| Race/ethnicity | |||||
| White, non-Hispanic |
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| 878 (82) | 229 (81) | |
| Black, non-Hispanic |
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| 46 (4) | 11 (4) | |
| Other race, non-Hispanic |
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| 89 (8) | 23 (8) | |
| Hispanic, any race |
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| 58 (5) | 19 (7) |
| Education | |||||
| Some college or less |
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| Bachelor’s or advanced degree |
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| Current smoker | |||||
| Yes |
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| No |
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| General health before illness | |||||
| Excellent or very good | 144 (73) | 794 (68) | 743 (69) | 188 (67) | |
| Good | 44 (22) | 308 (27) | 282 (26) | 71 (25) | |
| Fair or poor | 10 (5) | 60 (5) |
| 48 (4) | 22 (8) |
| Fever/feverishness during illness | |||||
| Yes | 128 (65) | 742 (64) | 694 (65) | 172 (61) | |
| No | 70 (35) | 422 (36) |
| 380 (35) | 110 (39) |
| Medical conditions associated with higher risk of influenza complications¶ | |||||
| Yes | 93 (47) | 586 (50) | 545 (51) | 134 (48) | |
| No | 105 (53) | 578(50) |
| 529 (49) | 148 (52) |
| Received influenza vaccine since July 1, 2017 | |||||
| Yes | 101 (51) | 597 (51) |
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| No | 97 (49) | 567 (49) |
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| Children <12 y of age in household | |||||
| 0 | 136 (69) | 772 (66) | 713 (66) | 192 (68) | |
| 1 | 33 (17) | 195 (17) | 180 (17) | 47 (17) | |
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| 29 (15) | 196 (17) |
| 180 (17) | 43 (15) |
| Worked the day before illness# | |||||
| Yes | 124 (65) | 741 (65) | 689 (65) | 177 (64) | |
| No | 68 (35) | 405 (35) |
| 366 (35) | 100 (36) |
| Paid leave benefits | |||||
| Yes |
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| NA | NA | |
| No |
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| NA | NA |
| Access to telework | |||||
| Yes | NA | NA |
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| No | NA | NA |
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| Employees are discouraged from coming to work when they have influenza-like symptoms** | |||||
| Agree | 152 (78) | 833 (72) |
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| Not agree | 44 (22) | 327 (28) |
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| Employees are encouraged to go home if they have influenza-like symptoms at work** | |||||
| Agree |
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| Not agree |
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| I have a lot of control over when I can take days off from work for illnesses** | |||||
| Agree |
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| Not agree |
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| Full-time worker | |||||
| Yes |
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| No |
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| Employee type | |||||
| Hourly |
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| Salaried or other |
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| Executive, administrator, or senior manager position (if salaried) | |||||
| Yes | 44 (30) | 109 (29) | 141 (29) | 12 (44) | |
| No | 105 (70) | 263 (71) |
| 352 (71) | 15 (56) |
| No. employees in organization | |||||
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| 62 (34) | 315 (30) |
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| 100–499 | 29 (16) | 181 (17) |
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| 89 (49) | 552 (53) |
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| Study site | |||||
| Michigan |
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| Pennsylvania |
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| Texas |
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| Washington |
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| Wisconsin |
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*Values are no. (%) unless otherwise indicated. Boldface indicates statistical significance. Numbers may not sum to n because of missing data. NA, not applicable. †p<0.05. ‡p<0.01. §p<0.001. ¶Based on International Classification of Diseases codes in electronic medical records in the year before enrollment. #Among those who worked the day before illness, the proportion who teleworked was 14% (17/124) for those with access to telework and 1% (5/741) for those without telework access (p<0.001). The proportion who teleworked was 3% (18/689) for those with access to paid leave and 2% (4/177) for those without access to paid leave. Among those who did not work the day before illness, the proportion who did not work because it was a day off was 81% (55/68) for those with telework access, and 83% (336/405) for those without telework access. **”Strongly agree” and “agree” responses were coded as agree. “Strongly disagree,” “disagree,” and “neither agree nor disagree” responses were coded as not agree.
Work attendance during the first 3 days of illness among adults with medically attended acute respiratory illness or influenza, United States, 2017–18 influenza season*
| Work attendance | Mean no. days worked | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Access to telework | Paid leave benefits | ||||
| Yes, n = 198 | No†, n = 1,164 | Yes, n = 1,074 | No, n = 282 | ||
| Worked |
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| 1.15 | 1.09 | |
| Usual workplace | 1.05 | 1.07 | 1.07 | 1.05 | |
| Teleworked |
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| 0.08 | 0.04 |
| Did not work |
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| 1.85 | 1.91 | |
| Felt ill |
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| 1.03 | 1.17 | |
| Day off | 0.64 | 0.72 | 0.72 | 0.66 | |
| Other reasons | 0.11 | 0.10 | 0.10 | 0.07 | |
*Days worked or not worked ranged from 0 to 3 days. Boldface indicates statistical significance. †Among 1,164 persons with no telework access (i.e., did not habitually telework), 15 persons reported that they worked from home for ≥1 d during the first 3 d of illness. ‡p<0.001.
Adjusted analysis to assess the association with days worked during the first 3 days of illness among adults with medically attended acute respiratory illness or influenza, United States, 2017–18 influenza season*
| Characteristic | Total days worked, n = 1,306 | Days worked at the usual workplace, n = 1,306 |
|---|---|---|
| Access to telework | ||
| No | Referent | Referent |
| Yes |
| 0.98 (0.82 |
| Access to paid leave | ||
| No | Referent | Referent |
| Yes |
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| Discouraged from coming to work with influenza-like symptoms | ||
| Not agree | Referent | Referent |
| Agree |
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*Values are adjusted ratios of days worked (95% CI). Boldface indicates statistical significance. Total days worked represents the sum of days worked at the usual workplace and days teleworked during the first 3 days of illness. The dependent variable in the zero-inflated Poisson regressions was days worked during the first 3 days of illness (i.e., 0, 1, 2, or 3 d). The final models contained the following independent variables: access to telework; access to paid leave; employees are discouraged from coming to work when they have flulike symptoms; age; sex; education; fever; worked the day before illness; having a lot of control over taking days off for illnesses; full-time worker; and employee type. The variable “employees are encouraged to go home if they have influenza-like symptoms at work” was excluded from the models because it was highly correlated with the variable “employees are discouraged from coming to work when they have influenza-like symptoms” (Spearman correlation coefficient 0.76; p<0.001); the latter variable has more relevance for reducing virus transmission in the workplace (not coming to work at all vs. coming to work with influenza-like symptoms and then told to go home). Sixty-eight records were excluded because of missing values. †p<0.01. ‡p<0.05.
Adjusted analysis to assess the association with days worked during the first 3 days of illness, United States, 2017–18 influenza season, by laboratory-confirmed influenza*
| Characteristic | Total days worked |
| Days worked at the usual workplace | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Influenza positive, n = 464 | Influenza negative, n = 839 | Influenza positive, n = 464 | Influenza negative, n = 839 | |||
| Access to telework | ||||||
| No | Referent | Referent | Referent | Referent | ||
| Yes |
| 1.19 (0.99 |
| 1.15 (0.83 | 0.92 (0.75 | |
| Access to paid leave | ||||||
| No | Referent | Referent | Referent | Referent | ||
| Yes | 0.81 (0.57 | 0.82 (0.68 |
| 0.79 (0.55 | 0.83 (0.68 | |
| Discouraged from coming to work with influenza-like symptoms | ||||||
| Not agree |
| Referent |
| Referent | ||
| Agree |
| 0.92 (0.80 |
| 0.90 (0.78 | ||
*Data are presented as adjusted ratios of days worked (95% confidence interval), unless otherwise indicated. Boldface indicates statistical significance. The dependent variable in the zero-inflated Poisson regressions was the number of days worked during the first 3 days of illness. The final models contained the following independent variables: access to telework; access to paid leave; employees are discouraged from coming to work when they have influenza-like symptoms; age; sex; education; fever; worked the day before illness; having a lot of control over taking days off for illnesses; full-time worker; and employee type. Sixty-eight records were excluded because of missing values, and an additional 3 records were excluded because laboratory confirmation of influenza by real-time reverse transcription PCR was not available. †p<0.05. ‡p<0.01.