COMMENTARY
Sickness absence
Ill health, social protection, labour relations, and sickness absence
Correspondence to:
Correspondence to:
Dr F G Benavides
Occupational Health Research Unit, Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona, Spain; fernando.benavides@upf.edu
Commentary on the paper by Virtanen et al (Occup Environ Med, March 2006)*
Keywords: ill health; social protection; labour relations; sickness absence
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
Health and work have a bidirectional relationship. Hazardous work can produce negative effects on health, in terms of injury and disease. It is less evident that ill health, due to the work environment or not, can produce negative effects on work in terms of absenteeism and low productivity. Sickness absence is an expression of this complex relation. In the first place sickness absence is necessary for the recovery of ill workers,1 as part of the medical treatment, and as such it is certified by a physician. In a second and complementary perspective, sickness absence is a consequence of ill health on work in terms of absence from work. Indeed, it has been considered as an indicator to measure the working populations health status,2 and also it may be considered as an indicator to measure the functioning of the companies.3 In other words, sickness absence might be considered as
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