| Job
Performance Can Go Up in Smoke!
Smokers
averaged about 11 more sick leave days than nonsmokers!
By
Ed Edelson, HealthDay
Reporter on 03/29/2007
(HealthDay
News) -- Employers who hire smokers should be ready for poorer-than-average
performance and above-average sick leave time, two studies indicate.
Overall,
the study of more than 14,000 Swedish workers found they took an
average of 25 sick leave days a year. But smokers averaged about
11 more sick leave days than nonsmokers, notes a report in the April
issue of Tobacco Control.
The
real surprise may be that sickness is only one of the reasons smokers
ask for more time off, its author said.
"I
found that health problems accounted for about two days and something,"
said researcher Dr. Petter Lundborg, assistant professor of economics
at the Free University in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. "The
remaining eight days are probably explained by something other than
health."
There
are a number of possible explanations for the difference, he said.
"Smokers tend to have lower income and be less educated,"
Lundborg said. "Then, there might be personal characteristics
that we can't observe."
Studies
have shown that smokers tend to have riskier jobs than nonsmokers,
he added. "And they might simply take more leisure days through
the sick leave system," Lundborg said.
The
Swedish data covered the years from 1988 to 1991. But Lundborg stressed
that what's true in Sweden might not necessarily be true in the
United States. "In Sweden, the state was paying for all sick
leave, giving 80 percent of income," Lundborg said. "I'm
not sure about the American system. But the basic point is probably
the same, since smokers are different from nonsmokers in many ways."
Another
report in the same journal found significantly worse on-the-job
performance by female smokers enlisting in the U.S. Navy compared
to nonsmokers.
The
study by Terry Conway, professor of psychology at San Diego State
University, looked at the records of almost 5,500 women who entered
the Navy in 1996 and 1997. Some 59,000 women now serve in the Navy.
"What
we found was very clearly a prospective reduction in performance
related to smoking," Conway said. "We looked at a number
of career outcome measures."
The
27 percent of women who were daily smokers when they enlisted were
much less likely to serve their full-eight year term than the 45
percent who had never smoked and the 28 percent who were former
smokers or smoked occasionally. While almost 63 percent of the nonsmokers
completed their term of service, only 45.5 percent of the smokers
did. Occasional or former smokers were in between, at just under
58 percent.
And
almost 16 percent of the smokers were discharged for misconduct,
compared to 6.8 percent of the nonsmokers and 8.4 percent of the
occasional or former smokers.
Similarly,
regular smokers were more likely to be discharged for medical reasons,
drug misuse or personality disorders.
Like
Lundborg, Conway found that factors other than the ill effects of
smoking on health played a role in the poor performance of smokers.
"Cigarette
smoking might simply be a marker for other underlying factors, such
as non-conformity and high risk-taking, that contribute to poorer
performance in the military," her team wrote.
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