Weng, Ali & Leonardi-Bee (2012)

From Harridanic
Revision as of 11:14, 27 November 2012 by Paul Herring (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Smoking and absence from work: Systematic review and meta-analysis of occupational studies is a meta-study of 29 other studies that purports to show that smokers took 2.74 (2 days 5 hours, 55 minutes and 12 seconds,) more days off work than non-smokers, ex smokers had a 14% increase in risk of absenteeism but strangely no extra days off could be detected. Smokers had a 19% increase in risk over ex-smokers and 33% increase in risk on never-smokers.

Note that since no absolute figures are given in the abstract, the phenomenon of small numbers may be at play here. If in a workforce of 1000 people, 3 non-smokers are likely to have a day off, the results (if believed) would indicate that 4 smokers would also have a day off.

Using magic formulae not presented in the abstract, they calculated that this equates to a 'cost' of £1.4bn in 2011.


No obvious mention is made about the occupations of the people studied - if it is even known; for example it may be that the jobs where more people are likely to smoke (outdoor jobs for example) have higher absenteeism rates (because being outside in rain/snow is more likely to impair the immune system making the subject more susceptible to colds/flu.)


Additionally, and rather glaringly, no figures are actually given for non-smokers; specifically, how many absolute days are taken off by non-smokers (or indeed, smokers?) How much does do non-smokers 'cost' businesses?


The research was conducted on behalf of the University of Nottingham who printed the press release[1], with UKCTCS and University of York also implicated[2]

Abstract

Aims

This study aimed to assess the association between smoking and absenteeism in working adults.

Methods

A systematic review and meta-analysis was performed by electronic database searches in MEDLINE, EMBASE, CAB Abstracts, PubMed, Science Direct and NHS EED (February 2012). Longitudinal, prospective cohorts or retrospective cohorts were included in the review. Summary effect estimates were calculated using random-effects meta-analysis.

Heterogeneity was assessed by I2 and publication bias was investigated.

As can be seen from the results, 29 studies were meta-analysed. No mention is made in the abstract of the total number of people the 29 studies covered, but if other research on other smoking matters is to be any guide, it won't be very many.

Results

A total of 29 longitudinal or cohort studies were included. Compared with non-smokers, current smokers had a 33% increase in risk of absenteeism (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.25 to 1.41; I2 = 63%; 17 studies).Current smokers were absent an average of 2.74 more days per year compared with non-smokers (95% CI 1.54 to 3.95; I2 = 90%; 13 studies). Compared with never smokers, ex-smokers had a 14% increase in risk of absenteeism (95% CI 1.08 to 1.21; I2 = 62%; 8 studies); however, no increase in duration of absence could be detected. Current smokers also had a 19% increase in risk of absenteeism compared with ex-smokers (95% CI 1.09 to 1.32, p < 0.01, 8 studies). There was no evidence of publication bias. The total cost of absenteeism due to smoking in the UK was estimated to be £1.4 billion in 2011.

Note the selective use of the 29 studies - the most used for any particular result was 17 (58.621% for those that like percentages to ridiculously silly precision.) The least used was 8 (27.5862%)

Conclusion

Quitting smoking appears to reduce absenteeism and result in substantial cost-savings for employers.

Note the use of a weasel word, which indicates that perhaps they don't quite believe their own results, or that more primary research is required rather than cherry picking 29 studies from, what is presumably, the thousands available.


Authors

References