According to UK government statistics over 8 million working days per year are lost due to illness and about a third of these are due to minor ailments such as coughs, colds, sickness and diarrhoea. Yet two individuals who are equally ill do not necessarily both report sick. New research published in the journal BMC Public Health shows that conflicts and stress at work can trigger taking sick leave.
A Swedish study interviewed more than 400 individuals, who worked at six different workplaces, including health care workers, office staff and people in the manufacturing industry, within a few days of them taking sick leave. Sociologist Hanna Hultin from the Karolinska Institutet explained, "When we compared aspects at work during the days just before the participants reported sick to other workdays, we found that problems in relationships with colleagues and superiors were more frequent in the days just before sick leave than on other days. We also found that individuals with a minor ailment were more likely to report sick when they expected that the following workday would be particularly stressful."
It would appear that the work environment affects not only health but also behaviour when ill. Understanding stress in the workplace plays an important part in determining why sick-leave rates differ between individuals in ways that do not mirror differences in health.