Thursday, 09 February 2012

Keeping healthy

Sickness absence is a thorny subject, but there are things you can do to stop it being exploited

According to the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development’s annual absence survey, the average annual sickness rate for housing associations is 4.2 per cent, or 9.8 days per employee. If absence is managed properly, you will have a rate no higher than 2.5 per cent (5.7 days per employee). If it is higher, calculate 1 per cent of your total pay bill for every percentage point above 2.5 per cent to see how much money you are wasting. This is on top of all of the other consequences of excessive absence.

So, how do you reduce absence?

Create an environment where people want to come to work: create an environment in which there are fair processes, clear direction and goals, properly trained line managers, and as much flexibility in working patterns as the service will allow.

Don’t appoint serial absentees: take up several years’ worth of references, with detailed breakdown of absences. If the applicant has consistently taken lots of days off every year, and there are no disability or pregnancy-related issues, don’t take them on. Don’t promote to management anyone with a record of persistent intermittent absence.

Return to work interviews: ensure that managers hold these each time someone returns from sick leave, even if it was only half a day. It shows people are missed. Research has shown this process has a significant impact on reducing absence.

Train line managers to manage absence: without training, they may be scared and seek to avoid managing it.

Don’t manage sickness as a disciplinary issue: have a sickness procedure aimed at supporting people to meet your attendance requirements. There’s no need to dispute the genuineness of reasons for absence, and there’s no distinction to be drawn between certificated or self-certificated absence. If someone can’t attend regularly enough to fulfil the terms of their contract, it’s reasonable to dismiss them after you have been through the supportive stages.

Have triggers for action in your procedure, and act: make it non-negotiable that managers pick up on the triggers and hold formal meetings as soon as these are reached, and that they record a very specific expectation for improvement over a set review period. Always invoke the next stage where the expectation is not met.

Develop a close relationship with your occupational health advisor: you can’t hope to manage absence effectively without a good occcupational health service. Never try to manage sickness by directly seeking reports from GPs or consultants.

Record and measure absence: require employees to notify absence to their line manager and the person responsible for centrally recording absence. Measure your lost time rate at least annually. If you follow all the tips above, you will soon start to see your absence rate plummet.

Helen Giles is managing director of homeless charity Broadway’s Real People HR consultancy

Have your say

You must sign in to make a comment

sign in register

Related

Articles

  • Cut price contracts threaten progress

    08/07/2011

    Slashing staffing levels and using cheaper, unskilled workers will undo all the positive work towards tackling homelesness

  • Sad state of affairs

    03/06/2011

    Changing attitudes towards social housing are a sad reflection on post-war Britain, says Jon Cruddas

  • Paternity test

    18/03/2011

    From April, fathers get an extra six months’ paternity leave. But they may not jump at the chance

  • The technology test

    02/09/2011

    Finding the right IT solution for your organisation can be a minefield. Lydia Stockdale discovers how it can be done

  • Festive survival tips

    16/12/2011

    Christmas can be a hard time for social housing tenants so they need useful advice, says Inside Housing’s anonymous columnist

Resources

  • How to be a rising star

    11/11/2011

    This week, Inside Housing is guest edited by inaugural Rising Stars winner Carla Keegans. Alex Turner asks what qualities could help you scale the same heights

  • Get some expert advice

    10/06/2011

    Every week Inside Housing’s Need to Know section brings you best practice advice and information on the subjects most concerning you. Free with today’s magazine is the first ever Need to Know supplement. Here our Ask the Experts panel answer some of the key questions it raises

  • Temporary solution

    20/05/2011

    New agency worker rules come into force in the autumn. Anita Pati explains why social landlords should be aware of the implications now

  • Cracking the glass ceiling

    11/02/2011

    Women are well represented in the social housing industry - but only up to middle management level. Lydia Stockdale reveals the results of Inside Housing’s exclusive women in housing survey and finds out what’s holding them back

  • An expensive business

    15/04/2011

    New regulations could make employing agency workers a lot dearer, says Tanya Harley, solicitor at Lewis Silkin

Latest Jobs

  • Head of Strategy & Governance

    We are at an exciting point in our journey to create a great company that delivers the best services – ...

    £65,000

    Closing: 2012-02-24 00:00:00

  • Board Members

    We are seeking to recruit professional board members with expertise in financa, legal or human resources for a small dynamic ...

    Expenses

    Closing: 2012-03-07 00:00:00

  • Board Member

    Accent Group is a successful national organisation, with a strong commitment to its customers, and to making a real difference ...

    £8K Per Annum

    Closing: 2012-02-17 00:00:00

  • Independent Board Member

    Trafford Housing Trust provide over 9,000 homes in Trafford, Greater Manchester - including homes to rent, homes for shared ownership, ...

    £4,000 per annum

    Closing: 2012-02-27 00:00:00

  • Non-Executive Director

    Expenses

    Closing: 2012-02-20 00:00:00