Developing coordinated leave policies that prioritize productivity and clear communications can help minimize productivity impacts of extended leaves
SAN FRANCISCO – June 3, 2019 – As more states appear ready to pass paid employee leave laws, new research by the Integrated Benefits Institute (IBI), a non-profit health and productivity research organization, finds that extended leaves impact business operations and add stresses to co-workers who cover absent employees’ responsibilities. The findings from a nationally representative survey of 538 employees underscores the productivity challenges for employers — which have indirect costs that often go unrecognized.
“Employees who need time off to recover from an illness, take care of a family member, or welcome a new child into the home certainly benefit from the financial security of paid leave,” said Brian Gifford, PhD, IBI’s Research Director. “And while existing research finds that employers don’t take a big financial hit from paid leaves, there are hidden costs to business operations and the wellbeing of team members when a colleague takes at least two weeks off. For the most part, employers are not hiring temporary substitutes or outsourcing to get the work done and team members pick up the slack or things get put on hold. While the financial impact of increased stress and work delays is hard to measure — it’s nonetheless real.”
The survey findings suggest looming productivity challenges for employers when taken alongside a second, state-by-state analysis of over 3 million Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) records from 2011 to 2017. The analysis shows:
“As paid leave becomes more widely available — by law or by corporate policies — employers should expect more employees, especially men, to take time off,” said Thomas Parry, PhD, IBI President. “The key to minimizing workflow disruptions and strains on other workers is to develop coordinated leave policies that take into account these impacts ahead of time, rather than having supervisors and team managers just manage as best they can.”
To help employers develop leave strategies that sustain productivity with minimal impacts to staff workloads, morale, and personnel costs, the report contains guidance from experts at leading health care, benefits and absence management firms. Recommendations from these experts include making team productivity a priority, developing a coordinated benefits strategy, and clearly communicating how leave policies work for both the leave-taker and impacted co-workers.
Additional survey findings:
Findings from the state-by-state analysis of FMLA leaves:
About Integrated Benefits Institute
The Integrated Benefit Institute’s independent research, industry-leading tools and data resources help companies link health-related programs to the outcomes that maximize the contributions of people to productivity and business performance. Founded in 1995, IBI is a national nonprofit research organization and business association serving 1,100 employer and supplier members and their 22 million employees. . For additional information, please visit www.ibiweb.org and follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn.
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