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NEWS'
8:40am Friday 3rd September 2010 in
A NEW policy introduced at the Great Western Hospital to improve the levels of sickness absence is having a positive effect according to figures released this week.
In April, the Trust introduced a new attendance management policy to help improve the attitude of managers to managing sickness absence.
At a meeting of the Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee held at the Civic Offices yesterday it was revealed that long term absence levels have fallen year on year since 2007 in all areas of the hospital.
Speaking at the meeting, spokeswoman for the Great Western Hospital, Leslie Maiden, said that 50 per cent of absences were made up of three main categories – stress and anxiety, musculo-skeletal and surgery and only one of these categories had shown an increase.
She added that sickness attributed to stress had fallen from 18.6 per cent last year to 14.1 per cent this year.
Oonagh Fitzgerald, director of workforce and education at GWH, said: “The Trust has focused on creating a culture of attendance at work and in reducing any barriers that may have been in the way.
“This has resulted in improvements in our attendance at work statistics and in our level of staff satisfaction and engagement.
“The Trust is, however, not complacent and there are ongoing initiatives to improve attendance at work which will impact positively on patient care.”
During the meeting, Trust members were congratulated on their work.
Councillor Brian Ford said: “You should be congratulated on these figures.
“This will not only enhance the patient care, but it will also enhance your budget.”
Miss Fitzgerald also said that sickness absence due to back and upper and lower limb injuries had significantly reduced over the past few years and that GWH was the only NHS representative in the country for the ‘Award for Health at Work’ category at the Personnel Today awards.
Comments(7)
EastleazeRed
says...
11:50am Fri 3 Sep 10
EastleazeRed
says...
11:51am Fri 3 Sep 10
strattonmidge
says...
3:42pm Fri 3 Sep 10
EastleazeRed wrote:Try working on one of the wards before you go throwing round comments like that. I agree that it's far preferable to be stressed at work than to have an acutely sick child, but until you've been pinned into a corner by a threatening relative, punched by confused patients and left with three trained nurses to look after 40 patients, I don't think you've got much of a right to tell me that I wouldn't know what stress was if it slapped me in the face. And no, I've not been off sick with stress through my job, but I do come home some days wondering if there is a slightly more sane way to earn a living.
Stress! That one always makes me laugh. They wouldn’t know what stress is if it slapped them in the face. If they want to see what stress is my advice would be to take a walk up to the children’s Unit and take a look at the faces of some of the parents up there whose children are dying of leukaemia?
EastleazeRed
says...
6:18pm Fri 3 Sep 10
trustnopolitician
says...
9:43am Sat 4 Sep 10
Robh
says...
10:44am Sat 4 Sep 10
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itsamess says...
10:59am Fri 3 Sep 10