Back to Search Start Over

Changes in sick notes associated with COVID-19 from 2020 to 2022: a cohort study in 24 million primary care patients in OpenSAFELY-TPP

Authors :
Andrew Steptoe
John Macleod
Daniel McCartney
Aziz Sheikh
Annie Herbert
Ben Goldacre
David Evans
Louise Jones
Sam Harper
Michael Green
Nicholas Timpson
John Wright
Liam Smeeth
Laurie A Tomlinson
Sinead Brophy
Kate Tilling
Andy Gibson
Paola Zaninotto
Stefan Neubauer
Yinghui Wei
Betty Raman
Chloe Park
Alun Hughes
Jonathan Sterne
Elena Lukaschuk
Stefan Piechnik
Angela Wood
Mark Green
Agnieszka Lemanska
Krishnan Bhaskaran
Kathryn Willan
Elsie Horne
Hannah Woodward
Ian Douglas
Andrew Wong
Andy Boyd
Harriet Forbes
Sinéad Langan
Nishi Chaturvedi
Tom Palmer
Kathryn Mansfield
Rachel Denholm
Emily Herrett
Kevin Wang
Bo Hou
Felix Greaves
Laura Sheard
Praveetha Patalay
Kishan Patel
Jessica Morley
Bang Zheng
Charlotte Booth
Spiros Denaxas
Brian MacKenna
Ruth E Costello
Jonathan Kennedy
William Hulme
Michael Parker
Geneviève Cezard
Syed A Shah
Amir Mehrkar
Peter Inglesby
Jonathan Cockburn
Laurie Tomlinson
John Parry
Frank Hester
Eoin McElroy
Amelia Green
Gillian Santorelli
Alisia Carnemolla
Richard Shaw
Samantha Ip
Venexia Walker
Emma L Turner
Richard Thomas
Rebecca Rhead
Archie Campbell
Ellen Thompson
Ruth Bowyer
Jane Maddock
Helen Curtis
Alex Walker
Olivia Hamilton
Rosie McEachan
Ellena Badrick
Stephen Smith
Richard Dobson
Stela McLachlan
Vanessa Ferreira
Vittal Katikireddi
Scott Walker
Lucy Teece
Simon Davy
John Tazare
Bettina Moltrecht
Theocharis Kromydas
Giorgio Di Gessa
Gareth Griffith
Viyaasan Mahalingasivam
Elizabeth Tunnicliffe
George Hickman
Tom Ward
Rebecca M Smith
Sam Parsons
Callum Stewart
Amos Folarin
Daniel Kopasker
Claire Steves
Louis Fisher
Sebastian C J Bacon
Lisa Hopcroft
Robin Y Park
Jon Massey
Iain Dillingham
Steven Maude
Wels Jacques
Linda Nab
Christopher Bates
Milan Wiedemann
Ruth Mitchell
Chao Fang
Fatima Almaghrabi
Jingmin Zhu
Lucy Bridges
Kurt Taylor
Colm Andrews
Jean Stafford
Nathan Cheetham
Sebastian CJ Bacon
Alicja Rapala
Robin Flaig
Andrea L Schaffer
Benjamin FC Butler-Cole
Liam Hart Ben Goldacre
Thomas O’Dwyer
Dylan Williams
Anika Knueppel
Katharine M Evans
Samantha Berman
Matthew Crane
Rebecca Whitehorn
Jacqui Oakley
Diane Foster
Kirsteen C Campbell
Alex Kwong
Ana Goncalves Soares
Renin Toms
Lizzie Huntley
Laura Fox
Rochelle Knight
Northstone Kate
Kanagaratnam Arun
Teri North
Marwa AL Arab
Jose IC Coronado
Arun S Karthikeyan
Ploubidis George
Bozena Wielgoszewska
Charis Bridger-Staatz
Paz Garcia
Maxim Freydin
Amy Roberts
Alex Walker Ben Goldacre
Jess Morley
Anoop Shah Richard Silverwood
Thomas Cowling
Kate Mansfield
Tiffany Yang
Tom Bolton
Alexia Sampri
Elena Rafeti
Robert Willans
Fiona Glen
Steve Sharp
Lee Hamill Howes
Lidia Nigrelli
Fintan McArdle
Chelsea Beckford
Yatharth Ranjan
Jd Carpentieri
Sarah Baz
John Kellas
Laura C Saunders
James M Wild
Peter Jezzard
Zeena-Britt Sanders
Lucy Finnigan
Milla Kibble
Francisco Perez-Reche
Dominik Piehlmaier
Edward Parker
Source :
BMJ Open, Vol 14, Iss 7 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2024.

Abstract

Objectives Long-term sickness absence from employment has negative consequences for the economy and can lead to widened health inequalities. Sick notes (also called ‘fit notes’) are issued by general practitioners when a person cannot work for health reasons for more than 7 days. We quantified the sick note rate in people with evidence of COVID-19 in 2020, 2021 and 2022, as an indication of the burden for people recovering from COVID-19.Design Cohort study.Setting With National Health Service (NHS) England approval, we used routine clinical data (primary care, hospital and COVID-19 testing records) within the OpenSAFELY-TPP database.Participants People 18–64 years with a recorded positive test or diagnosis of COVID-19 in 2020 (n=365 421), 2021 (n=1 206 555) or 2022 (n=1 321 313); general population matched in age, sex and region in 2019 (n=3 140 326), 2020 (n=3 439 534), 2021 (n=4 571 469) and 2022 (n=4 818 870); people hospitalised with pneumonia in 2019 (n=29 673).Primary outcome measure Receipt of a sick note in primary care.Results Among people with a positive SARS-CoV-2 test or COVID-19 diagnosis, the sick note rate was 4.88 per 100 person-months (95% CI 4.83 to 4.93) in 2020, 2.66 (95% CI 2.64 to 2.67) in 2021 and 1.73 (95% CI 1.72 to 1.73) in 2022. Compared with the age, sex and region-matched general population, the adjusted HR for receipt of a sick note over the entire follow-up period (up to 10 months) was 4.07 (95% CI 4.02 to 4.12) in 2020 decreasing to 1.57 (95% CI 1.56 to 1.58) in 2022. The HR was highest in the first 30 days postdiagnosis in all years. Among people hospitalised with COVID-19, after adjustment, the sick note rate was lower than in people hospitalised with pneumonia.Conclusions Given the under-recording of postacute COVID-19-related symptoms, these findings contribute a valuable perspective on the long-term effects of COVID-19. Despite likely underestimation of the sick note rate, sick notes were issued more frequently to people with COVID-19 compared with those without, even in an era when most people are vaccinated. Most sick notes occurred in the first 30 days postdiagnosis, but the increased risk several months postdiagnosis may provide further evidence of the long-term impact.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
14
Issue :
7
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMJ Open
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.1038a096d89044e5a8996a5c8992b394
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-080600