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Understanding Sickness Absence in the Ambulance Service

conference contribution
posted on 2024-02-07, 20:12 authored by Zahid AsgharZahid Asghar, Ruth GauntRuth Gaunt, Graham Law, Laura Simmons, Niro Siriwardena
<p>Background Ambulance service employees have high sickness absence rates compared to other National Health Service (NHS) occupations. The aim of this study was to understand factors linked to sickness absence in front-line ambulance servicestaff by determining whether there was an association between work and daily (non-work-related) stress, coping styles, demographic variables (health conditions, overtime hours, length of time in service, shift pattern, age and sex) and sickness absence.Methods We used a cross-sectional design. An opportunity sampling method was utilised to recruit full-time clinical andmanagement employees from a UK ambulance service to complete an online questionnaire. Multiple linear regression was used to determine whether and to what extent variation in sickness absence could be explained by the independent variables of interest listed.Results A total of 101 participants, including paramedics, team leaders and ambulance technicians, completed the questionnaire.Participants were aged 24 to 62 years (Mean [M] =45.29, Standard Deviation [SD]=9.97) with an average 13.8years in the service (SD=9.67). Sickness absence rates ranged from 0 to 83.3% (M=8.92, SD=14.99). Work and dailystress, coping styles, overtime hours and the presence of a health condition accounted for 17.5% of the variance in sickness absence with adjusted R2=13.2%. Work and daily stress, coping styles, overtime hours and the presence of a health condition significantly predicted sickness absence, F(5, 95) =4.039, p=0.002. Those with a health condition were 9.46 times more likely, on average, to have a leave of sickness absence.Conclusions Our findings suggest that the presence of a health condition may affect sickness absence more than stress andcoping styles. When designing interventions, it may be important to consider preventative measures that improve staff wellbeing and health status while also reducing sickness absence rates.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • University of Lincoln (Historic Research Outputs)

Publisher

Emergency Medical Journal

Date Submitted

2020-04-17

Date Accepted

2019-01-01

Date of First Publication

2019-01-01

Date of Final Publication

2019-09-24

Event Name

999EMS

Event Dates

26-27 March 2018

ePrints ID

40155

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