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Impact of Influenza and Influenza-Like Illness on Work Productivity Outcomes: A Systematic Literature Review.

Authors :
Zumofen, Marie-Hélène Blanchet
Frimpter, Jeff
Hansen, Svenn Alexander
Source :
PharmacoEconomics; Mar2023, Vol. 41 Issue 3, p253-273, 21p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Influenza is a persistent public health problem with a significant burden on patients, employers, and society. A systematic review by Keech and Beardsworth (2008) characterized the burden of influenza/influenza-like illness (ILI) on absenteeism. We conducted a systematic literature review evaluating the impact of influenza/ILI on work productivity among adults as an update to the work of Keech and Beardsworth. Methods: This systematic review identified studies evaluating the impact of influenza/ILI on absenteeism, presenteeism, or related work productivity measures for employees and employed caregivers based on laboratory confirmation, physician diagnosis, and/or self-reported illness. Eligible studies were in English, French, or German published from 7 March 2007 through 15 February 2022, in PubMed, Embase, or BIOSIS. Two reviewers completed screening and full-text review, with conflicts resolved by a third advisor. Summary data were extracted by two analysts; all records were quality checked by one analyst. Work productivity outcomes were summarized qualitatively, and risk of bias was not evaluated. Results: A total of 14,387 records were retrieved; 12,245 titles/abstracts were screened and 145 full-text publications were reviewed, of which 63 were included in the qualitative assessment. Studies of self-reported ILI were most frequent (49%), followed by laboratory-confirmed cases (37%) and physician diagnoses (11%). Overall, approximately 20–75% of employees missed work due to illness across study settings and populations. Mean time out of work among ill employees varied widely across study designs and populations, ranging from < 1 to > 10 days, and was often reported to be approximately 2–3 days. Considerable heterogeneity was observed across study designs, populations, and outcomes. Most employees (≈ 60–80%) reported working while experiencing influenza/ILI symptoms. Reporting of costs was sparse and heterogeneous; one study reported annual costs of influenza-related absences equating to $42,851 per 100,000 employee health plan members. Results were partitioned based on the following categories. Among otherwise healthy adults, 1–74% of workers missed ≥1 workday due to influenza/ILI, for a mean [standard deviation (SD)] of 0.5 (1.44) to 5.3 (4.50) days, and 42–89% reported working while ill, for a mean (SD) of 0.3 (0.63) to 4.4 (3.73) days. Among working caregivers, 50–75% missed work to care for children/household members with influenza/ILI, for 1–2 days on average. Similarly, the mean absenteeism among healthcare workers ranged from 0.5 to 3.2 days. Across studies evaluating vaccination status, generally smaller proportions of vaccinated employees missed time from work due to influenza/ILI. Conclusions: This systematic review summarized the productivity burden of influenza/ILI on the worldwide working-age population. Despite notable heterogeneity in study designs, influenza/ILI case definitions, and productivity outcome measures, this review highlighted the substantial productivity burden that influenza/ILI may have on employees, employers, and society, consistent with the findings of Keech and Beardsworth (2008). Plain Language Summary: The flu ('influenza') has an effect on patients, their families, employers, and society. A review of medical studies from 1995 to 2007 reported how having the flu or a flu-like illness causes people to miss work. We updated that paper using the same approach, and found 63 new studies from 2007 to February 2022. Overall, up to 75% of employees missed work when they had the flu or a flu-like illness. Their average time out of work was usually 2–3 days each time they were sick. Most employees who had the flu or flu-like illness also said that they continued to work while they were sick (60–80%). Most employed adults who were caregivers for someone else with the flu said that they missed work to care for someone else for an average of 1–2 days. Overall, people who were vaccinated against the flu missed less time from work compared with their peers who were not vaccinated. This review of published medical studies showed that the flu and flu-like illness has a meaningful impact on people's ability to work, which also impacts their employers and society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
11707690
Volume :
41
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
PharmacoEconomics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
161884393
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40273-022-01224-9