
An IT guy at a San Francisco tech startup comes to work looking like death warmed over near the end of flu season. He is visibly ill and sweating. Unfortunately, heâs also responsible for installing vital software to everyoneâs computers in the office and doesnât want to take off sick in the middle of the upgrade.
His colleagues beg him to go home, telling him theyâll be OK. Everyone is overreacting, he says, and pretends to lick their keyboards and cough on everything.
The upgrade continues despite his illness and soon people are calling in sick. All told, 20 percent of the workforce was out sick for multiple days; a few had to be hospitalized. He is confronted with this; his response: Theyâre whining.
This true story unfortunately isnât that uncommon. Even though 82 percent of HR managers in a recent study by OfficeTeam said their company encourages staff to stay home when theyâre sick, 85 percent of workers in the same survey announced that they have gone to the office while sick anyway.
The takeaway? If managers want to keep their teams healthy, theyâve got make the message a lot clearer, and also practice what they preach.
According to that same survey, people say they work while sick because they feel well enough to work and they donât want to fall behind.
Itâs tricky to determine whether a person who thinks they donât need to call in sick is, in fact, right. When people have been sick and are on the mend again, they might still sound terrible but feel much better. But conversely, people are often contagious a few days before they start exhibiting symptoms. âItâs those days when theyâre still coughing but their fever has broken that an employee might think, âIâm lethargic, but if I go ahead and drive in, I could get my work done,â â said Claire Bissot, managing director of CBIZ HR Services.
Not having sick days, saving sick time in case they need it later, and not wanting to burden co-workers with extra work were other common survey responses. âA lot of times, people feel guilty about making colleagues take up the slack for work theyâve left behind,â said HR consultant Arquella Hargrove of Meta Training and Consulting in Houston. Whatever the reason, as Lisa Oyler, HR director at Access Development Corp. in Salt Lake City points out, workers would be much better served taking real time off to recuperate fully. âIf you take care of yourself, youâre going to get better quicker.â
Again, itâs not just about the worker but also their colleagues. âWhen youâre contagious, think about your community and stay home.â Oyler said. When employees donât heed this advice, management needs to intervene. Oyler recalled a time when a colleague came into work with a scratchy throat. âAs soon as everyone found out his kids had strep, our manager sent him home.â Not every boss reacts so well, though. Bissot was stunned at the story about the office epidemic at the San Francisco tech startup and said, âShame on that manager. I would have said, âHereâs a mask and gloves, now teach me how to do what you need to do so you can go home.â â
Managers can avoid having to take a forceful stand against sick colleagues by making it 100 percent clear itâs OK for anyone to be out sick. âDeadlines are deadlines, but employeesâ health is also important,â Oyler said. âYou canât make employees feel guilty. If an employee wakes up sick, there should be no doubt in their mind that they should stay home.â
Prevention Plans
Companies can do a lot to encourage wellness in the workplace. Influenza costs the American economy $87 billion in lost productivity each year, but only about half of Americans get vaccinated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Getting vaccinated is the No. 1 way to prevent flu, according to the CDC. Itâs especially important for pregnant women, senior citizens and people with asthma, diabetes or certain other immune-compromising conditions, as theyâre at higher risk for flu-related complications.
The CDC recommends hosting a flu vaccination clinic in the workplace to provide shots at low cost or no cost. That makes it as easy as possible for employees to protect themselves and check off that annual task from their to-do lists.
Bissotâs company opens up its flu vaccine clinic to family and friends of employees as well. âI think inviting the whole family in is a great idea, because if the kids are sick, the parents stay home sick,â she said.
Thereâs no such thing as emphasizing it too many times: âStay home if youâre sickâ is a message that employees need to hear again and again. âHR can communicate it but it doesnât really mean anything unless employees hear it from their managers,â Oyler said.
Posting fliers encouraging thorough hand-washing and healthy sneezing hygiene can help.
âThe more places you remind people to wash their hands and use hand sanitizer, the better off you are,â Bissot said. âDuring this season, you can make a fun gift out of it,â she added. âYou can print a reminder and deliver it to everyone with tissues and two Emergen-Cs to raise awareness.â She recommends that companies buy hand sanitizer, disinfecting wipes and facial tissues in bulk to make them easily accessible in the office.
Beyond influenza, diseases such as norovirus can spread like wildfire in a workplace. Often described colloquially as âstomach fluâ or âfood poisoning,â the gastrointestinal malady is highly infectious and spread both by direct contact and through the air.
Knowing that germs can live on hard surfaces for up to 72 hours, Bissot recommends talking to the officeâs cleaning crew to make sure they are sanitizing doorknobs, kitchen appliances and vending machine buttons. âIt may cost the company a little extra,â Bissot said, âBut one hour of a cleaning crew compared to having seven to 10 people out of every 50 sick is worth it.â
Staying Flexible
Itâs one thing for a staff member to come to work sick to avoid falling behind, but managers should also be aware of employeesâ economic reasons for working while sick. âNonexempt people might not be paid for sick days, so if you have someone that really needs to be paid and be working, theyâre going to come sick,â Hargrove said. The same goes for people who have run out of days in their PTO banks. She advises managers to be as flexible as they can to keep infectious workers out of the office. âIf they come in and you have to send them home, maybe you can allow them to make up that time in the same payroll period.â
Allowing people for whom itâs practical to work from home to do so is one option to get teams through contagious illnesses unscathed. âIf they really need to be there, though, we can come up with a creative solution like setting them up in a private office on a critical day,â Oyler said.
Itâs important for leaders to have a contingency plan for flu season and beyond. Itâs safe to assume a few folks will get sick at any given time. Managers should know in advance what resources are at their disposal. âBe proactive and make sure thereâs a backup plan, so if someone is out, someone else can pick up the slack,â Hargrove said. âIf people can work from home, thatâs fine. If you have someone out for too long, maybe bring someone in on a temporary basis.â
And managers should remember that employees will follow the bossâ lead: Supervisors need to be willing to call in sick themselves.
âIt all starts with managers,â Bissot says. âYou canât try to enforce a rule when you arenât following it yourself. If you contaminate other people, youâll just make things harder for yourself.â
Brandi Britton is a district vice president for OfficeTeam, a staffing service company based in the Bay Area. Comment below or email editors@workforce.com.