Tuesday 25 October 2011

Absenteesim increases due to extended drink hours

Well, it seems to be that that one last drink at the pub on a Thursday evening does really matter after all.  Personnel Today reports that:

Economists Colin Green and Maria Navarro, using the Government's UK Labour Force Survey, compared work absence rates from before and after the 2005 Licensing Act changes and found that absence rates rose by 1% after more pubs and bars could legally stay open past 11pm. For a workforce of 25 million people, a 1% rise in sick leave equals an estimated 5,349,617 hours or 667,702 sick days in total across all workers in England and Wales.
 The researchers also noted that an increase of 1.5% in health problems among the working-age population equates to an extra 501,000 people reporting ill health following the policy change, with the number of women reporting health problems higher due to a marked increase in female drinking.