Artigo Revisado por pares

Lost Productive Work Time Costs From Health Conditions in the United States: Results From the American Productivity Audit

2003; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; Volume: 45; Issue: 12 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1097/01.jom.0000099999.27348.78

ISSN

1536-5948

Autores

Walter F. Stewart, Judith A. Ricci, Elsbeth Chee, David Morganstein,

Tópico(s)

Employment and Welfare Studies

Resumo

Learning Objectives Recall the overall magnitude of lsot productive time (LPT) and its dollar cost as found in the American Productivity Audit, and the respective contributions of absenteeism and decreased producitivity at work. Be aware of how LPT varies with a number of demographic and workrelated factors. Compare the factors predisposing to LPT for personal and family-related reasons. The American Productivity Audit (APA) is a telephone survey of a random sample of 28,902 U.S. workers designed to quantify the impact of health conditions on work. Lost productive time (LPT) was measured for personal and family health reasons and expressed in hours and dollars. Health-related LPT cost employers $225.8 billion/year ($1685/employee per year); 71% is explained by reduced performance at work. Personal health LPT was 30% higher in females and twice as high in smokers (≥1 pack/day) versus nonsmokers. Workers in high-demand, low-control jobs had the lowest average LPT/week versus the highest LPT for those in low-demand, high-control jobs. Family health-related work absence accounted for 6% of all health-related LPT. Health-related LPT costs are substantial but largely invisible to employers. Costs vary significantly by worker characteristics, suggesting that intervention needs vary by specific subgroups.

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