期刊论文详细信息
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Sickness Absence in the Private Sector of Greece: Comparing Shipyard Industry and National Insurance Data
Evangelos C. Alexopoulos1  Georgios Merekoulias1  Dimitra Tanagra1  Eleni C. Konstantinou2  Efi Mikelatou2 
[1]Public Health Department, Medical School, University of Patras, 26504, Greece
[2]Faculty of Health and Caring Professions, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, 12210, Greece
关键词: sickness absence;    sick leave;    occupational health;    social insurance;    employment;    compensation;    shipyard;    industry;    Greece;   
DOI  :  10.3390/ijerph9041171
来源: mdpi
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【 摘 要 】

Approximately 3% of employees are absent from work due to illness daily in Europe, while in some countries sickness absence exceeds 20 days per year. Based on a limited body of reliable studies, Greek employees in the private sector seem to be absent far less frequently (<5 days/year) compared to most of the industrialized world. The aim of this study was to estimate the levels of sickness absence in the private sector in Greece, using shipyard and national insurance data. Detailed data on absenteeism of employees in a large shipyard company during the period 1999–2006 were utilized. National data on compensated days due to sickness absence concerning all employees (around 2 million) insured by the Social Insurance Institute (IKA, the largest insurance scheme in Greece) were retrieved from the Institute’s annual statistical reports for the period 1987–2006. Sick-leave days per employee and sick-leave rate (%) were calculated, among other indicators. In the shipyard cohort, the employment time loss due to sick leave was 1%. The mean number of sick-leave days per employee in shipyards ranged between 4.6 and 8.7 and sick-leave rate (sickness absenteeism rate) varied among 2% and 3.7%. The corresponding indicators for IKA were estimated between 5 and 6.3 sick-leave days per insured employee (median 5.8), and 2.14–2.72% (median 2.49%), respectively. Short sick-leave spells (<4 days) may account at least for the 25% of the total number of sick-leave days, currently not recorded in national statistics. The level of sickness absence in the private sector in Greece was found to be higher than the suggested by previous reports and international comparative studies, but still remains one of the lowest in the industrialized world. In the 20-years national data, the results also showed a 7-year wave in sickness absence indexes (a decrease during the period 1991–1997 and an increase in 1998–2004) combined with a small yet significant decline as a general trend. These observations deserve detailed monitoring and could only partly be attributed to the compensation and unemployment rates in Greece so other possible reasons should be explored.

【 授权许可】

CC BY   
© 2012 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

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