https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-67863535

**Northern Ireland workers called in sick more in 2022 than in any of the other previous eight years, a report suggests.**

Ulster University Economic Policy Centre (UUEPC) analysed and compared sickness absence across the UK.

Staff took on average six sick days in 2022 (2.7%) compared to 4.2 days (1.9%) in 2019.
The most common reasons for workers’ absences were accidents, poisoning and infections.

The report said that in the UK, Northern Ireland had the second-lowest increase.
Wales had a rate of 3.6% in 2022; Scotland 3% and England 2.5%.

Sick days at work hit highest level for 10 years

The report said the top reasons across the UK for calling in sick were “accidents, poisoning, infectious diseases and skin disorders”, accounting for 26%.

“Minor aliments, including coughs, colds and gastrointestinal illnesses, accounted for just under a quarter of days lost (24%),” it added.

**Ageing population**

Gillian Martin, senior economist at UUEPC, said the increased rate of workers being absent was due to many people having a long-term health conditions and a growing and ageing population.

“In 2022, 5.1 million days were lost due to sickness across Northern Ireland, an increase from 3.8 million in 2019,” she said.

The research found that 35% of people in Northern Ireland have a long-term health condition which “coupled with NI’s growing and ageing population, suggests that sickness and therefore absences are likely to be a lingering issue”, she added.

Ms Martin said firms and managers needed to be supported and encouraged to act to reduce further negative impacts.

Those working in health and social work had the highest absence rate of 4.2% in 2022 across the UK.

Workers in information and communication had the lowest absence rate of 1.4%, which the report suggested was linked to workers being able to work from home. The highest increase in sickness across all sectors was in the accommodation and food sector which rose to 2.9% in 2022, an increase of 1.6% since 2019.

**Civil Service sickness**

The report found that in the public sector, the Northern Ireland Civil Service (NICS) had continually higher sickness absences compared to the civil services in the rest of the UK and Republic of Ireland.”Overall, in the NICS, 5.7% of working days were lost in 2022/23 compared to 5.9% in 2019/20,” the report said.

“The direct salary cost of absence in 2022-23 was £39m, or 3.7% of the NICS pay bill.”

Absences were higher among more junior civil service and public sector workers.

“When broken down by grade level, the general trend is for absences to decrease as seniority increases. For instance, in 2022-23 individuals who were grade five and above (senior civil servants) lost 6.1 working days per staff year compared to 13.8 workings days lost for administrative staff,” Ms Martin added.

by Enflamed-Pancake

6 comments
  1. I got covid a couple of months ago and it was unadulterated brutality for the guts of two weeks. It’s still a huge problem.

  2. Covid sick leave no longer has a separate category in a number of businesses from other sick leave now.

    Duh

  3. Hmmm I wonder is it anything to do with the chronically underfunded GPs, hospitals and lack of dental availability.

  4. >Staff took on average six sick days in 2022.

    Shit guys that’s fucking loads. Almost a whole week! Won’t somebody think of the precious economy?!

    But hey, far easier to write a Tory fluff piece saying “fuck those disgusting poors for trying to kill our economy” than it is to pressure their paymasters into systemic changes to ensure people who are overworked and stressed out take fewer days sick leave…

  5. Of course sick days are up, svery little has been learned from Covid. People are going to work and the shops sick, spreading illnesses on buses and generally being selfish pricks… Then again, can we blame them if workplaces are no longer being accomodating towards Covid patients?

  6. If I got paid for my sick days I might increase that average

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