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Sick leave due to COVID-19 during the first pandemic wave in France, 2020

Authors :
Smith, David R M
Jijón, Sofía
Oodally, Ajmal
Shirreff, George
Ai¨t Bouziad, Karim
Ante-Testard, Pearl Anne
Bastard, Jonathan
Bouziri, Hanifa
Daouda, Oumou Salama
Duchemin, Tom
Godon-Rensonnet, Anne-Sophie
Henriot, Paul
Houri, Yasmine
Neynaud, Hélène
Perozziello, Anne
Thonon, Frédérique
Crépey, Pascal
Dab, William
Jean, Kévin
Temime, Laura
Source :
Occupational and Environmental Medicine; 2023, Vol. 80 Issue: 5 p268-272, 5p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

ObjectivesTo quantify the burden of COVID-19-related sick leave during the first pandemic wave in France, accounting for sick leaves due to symptomatic COVID-19 (‘symptomatic sick leaves’) and those due to close contact with COVID-19 cases (‘contact sick leaves’).MethodsWe combined data from a national demographic database, an occupational health survey, a social behaviour survey and a dynamic SARS-CoV-2 transmission model. Sick leave incidence from 1 March 2020 to 31 May 2020 was estimated by summing daily probabilities of symptomatic and contact sick leaves, stratified by age and administrative region.ResultsThere were an estimated 1.70M COVID-19-related sick leaves among France’s 40M working-age adults during the first pandemic wave, including 0.42M due to COVID-19 symptoms and 1.28M due to COVID-19 contacts. There was great geographical variation, with peak daily sick leave incidence ranging from 230 in Corse (Corsica) to 33 000 in Île-de-France (the greater Paris region), and greatest overall burden in regions of north-eastern France. Regional sick leave burden was generally proportional to local COVID-19 prevalence, but age-adjusted employment rates and contact behaviours also contributed. For instance, 37% of symptomatic infections occurred in Île-de-France, but 45% of sick leaves. Middle-aged workers bore disproportionately high sick leave burden, owing predominantly to greater incidence of contact sick leaves.ConclusionsFrance was heavily impacted by sick leave during the first pandemic wave, with COVID-19 contacts accounting for approximately three-quarters of COVID-19-related sick leaves. In the absence of representative sick leave registry data, local demography, employment patterns, epidemiological trends and contact behaviours can be synthesised to quantify sick leave burden and, in turn, predict economic consequences of infectious disease epidemics.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13510711 and 14707926
Volume :
80
Issue :
5
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Occupational and Environmental Medicine
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs62790955
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/oemed-2022-108451