Workplace-Related Socioeconomic Issues Associated with Job Performance and Productivity among Employees with Various Impairments: A Systematic Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Eligibility Criteria
3. Results
3.1. Study Selection
3.2. General Description of the Identified Studies
3.3. Participants
3.4. Instruments and Measurements
3.4.1. Instruments Used to Measure Headache and Migraine-Related Issues
3.4.2. Instruments Used to Measure Depression-Related Issues
3.4.3. Instruments Used to Measure Arthritis-Related Issues
3.4.4. Instruments Used to Measure Musculoskeletal-Disorder-Related Issues
3.4.5. Instruments Used to Measure Multiple-Sclerosis-Related Issues
4. Discussion and Key Findings
4.1. Employee Productivity
4.2. Workplace Absenteeism and Presenteeism
4.3. Productivity Loss (PL)/Productivity Time Loss (PTL)
4.4. Costs
5. Research Significance
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
ADA | Americans with Disabilities Act |
ASD | Autism spectrum disorder |
BASDAI#1 | Question 1 from the Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis Disease Activity Index |
CCI | The Carlson Comorbidity Index |
CDOMD | Chronic disabling musculoskeletal disorder |
COPD | Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease |
CVD | Cardiovascular disease |
CVERP | Cardiovascular events and related clinical procedures |
DLQI#4 | Question 4 from the Dermatology Life Quality Index |
DMT | Disease-modifying therapy |
EBC | Early-stage breast cancer |
EDSS | The Expanded Disability Status Scale |
EuroQol-5d | The Euro Quality of Life 5-dimension Questionnaire |
EWDs | Employees with disabilities |
GAD-7 | The seven-item Generalised Anxiety Disorder |
HA | A group that does not meet the diagnostic criteria for migraine or tension-type headache |
HFASD | High-functioning autism spectrum disorders |
HR | Human resources |
HRQoL | Health-related quality of life |
IDD | Intellectual and developmental disabilities |
IPAQ | The International Physical Activity Questionnaire |
LPT | Lost productive time |
LTD | Long-term disability |
M | Migraine group; migraine |
MBC | Metastatic breast cancer |
MFIS | The Modified Fatigue Impact Scale |
MIDAS | The Migraine Disability Assessment Score Questionnaire |
MM | Multiple myeloma |
MS | Multiple sclerosis |
M/TTH | Migraine and tension-type headache group |
N.A. | Not available |
NHA | A group that does not have headaches (no headaches) |
PC-SAD | The patient-administered depression screening instrument |
PGA | Physician Global Assessment |
PHQ-9 | The Patient Health Questionnaire (Depression Scale) |
PRIME-MD | The Primary Care Evaluation of Mental Disorders—Mood Model |
PsA | Psoriatic arthritis |
PsAQOL#1 | Question 1 from the Psoriatic Arthritis Quality of Life Questionnaire |
PsAQOL#4 | Question 4 from the Psoriatic Arthritis Quality of Life Questionnaire |
PWDs | People with disabilities |
pwMS | People with multiple sclerosis |
RTW | Return-to-work |
SAS | Statistical Analysis System |
SAW | Stay-at-work |
SF-12 | The 12-Item Short-Form Health Survey |
SF-36 | Short Form-36 |
SF-12x2 | The 12-item Short-Form Health Survey Second Edition |
SL | Sick leave |
SLR | Systematic literature review |
SPSS | Statistical Package for the Social Sciences |
SSI | Somatic Symptom Inventory |
STD | Short-term disability |
TTH | Tension-type headache group |
UKM | Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia |
VOLP | The Valuation of Lost Productivity Questionnaire |
WA/WAB | Workplace absenteeism |
WLQ | The Work Limitations Questionnaire |
WOS | Web of Science |
WPAI | The Work Productivity and Activity Impairment Questionnaire |
WPAI-GH | The Work Productivity and Activity Impairment Questionnaire—General Health |
WPL | Work Productivity Loss/Workplace productivity loss |
QoL | Quality of life |
QoWL | Quality of work life |
Appendix A
Reference | Workplace Absenteeism | Workplace Presenteeism | |
---|---|---|---|
2003–2005 | Stewart et al. (2003b) | “The sum of hours per week absent from work for a health-related reason” (p. 3136). | “The hour-equivalents per week of health-related reduced performance on workdays” (p. 3136). “Reduced work performance during the recall period” (p. 3136). |
Stewart et al. (2003a) | “The sum of hours per week absent from work for a health-related reason” (p. 2445). “Missed workdays and reduced work hours on days at work during the recall period” (p. 2445). | “The hour equivalent of health-related reduced performance on days at work” (p. 2445). | |
Lerner et al. (2004) | “Missed work time and productivity loss caused by missed work time” (p. 1371). | “Diminished on-the-job performance and productivity” (p. 1371). | |
Lötters et al. (2005) | N.A. | “Reduced productivity while the worker is still on the job” (p. 367). | |
2006–2010 | Ciconelli et al. (2006) | “Days or hours of work are missed due to a health problem” (p. 325). “Percentage of work time missed due to health” (p. 325). | “Reduction of the effectiveness of a person while working, due to a health problem” (p. 325). “Percentage impairment at work due to health” (p. 325). |
Kleinman et al. (2007) | “Sick leave, short-and-long term disability, and worker’s compensation” | N.A. | |
Dall et al. (2008) | N.A. | “Reduced performance at work” (p. 602). | |
Howard et al. (2009) | “Commonly recognized as employees not showing up for work” (p. 724). “An absentee is one who ceased working” (p. 726). | “The way productivity is affected while the ill employee continues to ‘punch the clock’” (p. 724). “Presentee is who continued to work” (p. 726). | |
2011–2015 | Meijster et al. (2011) | N.A. | “Productivity losses due to sick workers continuing to work” (p. 741). “Ill workers are less productive at work” (p. 744). |
Henderson et al. (2011) | N.A. | “A situation where an employee is symptomatic and underperforming but remains at work” (p. 200). “Being less productive due to ill health” (p. 200). | |
Gussenhoven et al. (2012) | N.A. | “Being present at work but not functioning at full capability” (p. 2/11). | |
Reavley et al. (2012) | N.A. | “Being unproductive at work” (p. 1/7). | |
Selekler et al. (2013) | N.A. | “Impaired effectiveness at work” (p. 1/6). | |
Wan et al. (2013) | “The paid time when absent from work” (p. 1170). | N.A. | |
Hutting et al. (2013) | “Sickness absence”. | “Decreased work productivity while at work”. | |
Sears et al. (2013) | “Being away from work” (pp. 397–98). | “Not being fully productive in meeting expectations while at work” (p. 398). | |
Walsh et al. (2014) | “Time away from work” (p. 1670). | “Reduced effectiveness at work” (p. 1670). | |
Wang and Gorenstein (2014) | “Missed workdays”. | “Non-quantifiable low performance while at work”. | |
Noben et al. (2014) | “A person is not at work due to health complaints” (p. 19/21). | “Reduced productivity while still at work” (p. 2/21). “A person is not productive while at work due to health complaints” (p. 19/21). | |
Lewis et al. (2015) | “Enquiring about time off work” (p. 580). | N. A. | |
Robroek et al. (2015) | “Time away from work” (p. 1670). | “Reduced effectiveness at work” (p. 1670). | |
2016–2020 | Zhang et al. (2016) | “Short-term absence from work” (p. 413). | “Reduced performance while working” (p. 413). |
Young et al. (2016) | N. A. | “Productivity focuses on what a person at work can do, presenteeism focuses on what a person at work cannot do” (p. 438). | |
Brandford and Reed (2016) | N. A. | “The productivity loss that occurs when workers are present at work but are not functioning at peak performance because of health problems” (p. 489). | |
Nakata et al. (2018) | “Time off from work caused by health-related non-attendance, disability and/or workers’ compensation” (p. 2/11). “The percentage of work time missed because of one’s health in the past 7 days” (p. 3/11). | “Health-related productivity losses occur while employees are at work” (p. 2/11). “The percentage of impairment experienced while at work in the past 7 days because of one’s health” (p. 3/11). | |
Sruamsiri et al. (2018) | “Percentage of work time missed due to health problems” (p. 584). “Sick leave” (p. 584). | “Percentage of impairment while working due to health problems” (p. 584). “Reduced work performance” (p. 584). | |
Fløvik et al. (2019) | N. A | “Lower performance and productivity while at work” (p. 135). | |
Domingues et al. (2020) | “Work time missed” (pp. 468, 469). | “Impairment at work” (pp. 468, 469). | |
Behrens et al. (2020) | “Work time missed due to illness (% of missed work hours due to health problems in the past 7 days” (p. 2584). “Missed hours of work” (p. 2588). | “Impairment at work” (p. 2584). “Percentage impairment while at work” (pp. 2584–85). “On-the-job effectiveness” (p. 2588). “Reduced productivity at work” (p. 2588). | |
Haw et al. (2020) | “The number of workdays lost due to migraine” (p. 4/11). | “Number of workdays with impaired work productivity due to migraine” (p. 4/11). | |
Wong et al. (2020) | “The mean per cent work time missed due to migraine” (p. 1/11). “Per cent work time missed due to migraine” (pp. 3, 5//11). | “The mean per cent productivity loss at work” (p. 1/11). “Per cent impairment while working due to migraine” (pp. 3, 5/11). | |
2021–2022 | Gennep et al. (2021) | “The percentage of hours missed due to Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) during the past week” (p. 2917). | “Work impairment due to Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) while working” (p. 2917). |
Shimizu et al. (2021) | N.A. | “Working while sick leads to more lost work than absenteeism” (p. 2/11). “An individual’s loss of work productivity due to health conditions and the symptoms of a disease” (p. 6/11). “Reduced productivity” (p. 7/11). | |
Smith et al. (2021) | “A patient’s reported hours of missed work relative to his or her total typical work hours” (p. 321). | “The extent to which an employee is not fully functional at work” (p. 319). “A patient’s perceived change in work quality compared with his or her usual work quality” (p. 321). | |
Rotaru et al. (2021) | N.A. | “Loss of productivity during working hours” (p. 312). | |
Vornholt et al. (2021) | N. A | “The condition of being present at work without being productive” (p. 141). | |
Iragorri et al. (2021) | “Staying home while sick” (p. 338). | N.A. | |
Rodriguez Llorian et al. (2022) | “Time missed from work” (p. 1414). | “Reduced productivity while working” (p. 1414). |
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Author/Year of Publication/Country | Purpose of the Study | Design/Approach/Software | Sample Size/Participants/Sampling Method | Instruments/Measurements | Mean Age/Percentage in Terms of Gender | Key Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(Stewart et al. 2003b) The U.S. | To estimate the impact of depression on labour costs (work absenteeism and reduced performance while at work) among US workers. | Cross-sectional. Quantitative. Wesvar, version 4 and SAS, version 8.2. | 219 employees with depression and 908 employees without depression. Random sampling. | PRIME-MD (mood). The 26-item SSI (26 physical symptoms). The DSM-III-R (the diagnosis of a specific depressive disorder). A 7-factor solution (1-pain, weakness and fatigue (7 items), 2-gastrointestinal complaints (3 items), 3-panic or anxiety (3 items), 4-faintness or dizziness (4 items), 5-autonomic instability with anxiety (2 items), 6-ringing in the ears, or head or nose fullness (2 items) and 7-sensory or nerve impairment (2 items). | 66%—between 35 and 65 years. 65.6%—female. | A majority of the LPT costs that employers face from employee depression are invisible and explained by reduced performance while at work. |
(Lerner et al. 2004) The U.S. | To comprehensively assess work outcomes among employees with depression. | Longitudinal. Quantitative. Stata, version 7.0. | 229 employees with depression, 87 employees with rheumatoid arthritis, and 173 healthy employees in the control group. N. A. | CAGE questionnaire (alcoholism). PC-SAD (dysthymia and major depressive disorder). PHQ-9 scale (depressive symptom severity). WLQ (presenteeism). Two items from the WLQ (absenteeism). The Medical Outcomes Study SF-12 (health status). | 41.1 years—dysthymia, 38.7 years—major depression, 39.8 years—both dysthymia and major depression, 47.7 years—rheumatoid arthritis, 41.4 years—control group. 81%—female. | In addition to helping employees with depression obtain high-quality depression treatment, new interventions may be needed to help them to overcome the substantial job upheaval. |
(Lötters et al. 2005) The Netherlands | To quantify the reduced productivity of workers on full duty after sickness absence from a musculoskeletal disorder and determine the effect of health parameters such as perceived pain, functional disability, and general health on reduced productivity. | Longitudinal. Quantitative. N.A. | 253 occupational physicians with musculoskeletal disorders. N.A. | The Job Content Questionnaire (psychological factors at work: work demands (11 items), skill discretion (6 items), and discussion authority (11 items); The Ronald Morris Disability Questionnaire for back complaints (functional disability). The physical dimension of the Sickness Impact Profile (low back pain). SF-12 (general health, functioning, role—physical, bodily pain, vitality, role—emotional, social functioning, and mental health). EuroQol-5d (mobility, self-care, daily activity, pain, and anxiety or depression). EuroQol visual analogue scale (thermometer). | 43 years. 73%—male. | Reduced productivity was prevalent for 60% of the workers after they returned to work and for 40% still at the 12-month follow-up. Worsening physical health, more functional disability, and poorer relations with the supervisor were associated with productivity loss shortly after RTW, whereas recurrent sick leave was the greatest predictor of productivity loss at the follow-up. |
(Kleinman et al. 2007) The U.S. | To evaluate the impact of gout, a painful inflammatory arthritis condition, on an employed population’s health-related work absence and to objectively measure productivity output. | Cross-sectional. Quantitative. SAS, version 9.1. | 86 employees with gout and 27,632 employees without gout. N.A. | N.A. | 45.91 years—employees with gout, 40.41 years—employees without gout. 85.0%—male employees with gout, 54.3%—male employees without gout. | Gout has a substantial impact on work absence and may negatively affect productivity. |
(Howard et al. 2009) The U.S. | To take a new approach to understand how presenteeism relates to chronic pain or disability patient outcomes. | Longitudinal. Quantitative. N.A. | 2191 CDOMD patients (presentees—n = 704 and absentees—n = 1487). N.A. | The Pain Intensity Analog. The Million Visual Analog Scale. A measurement for assessing perceived disability. The Beck Depression Inventory. The Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory. The Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I and Axis II diagnoses. | 46.4 years—presentees, 45.4 years—absentees. 46.7%—male presentees, 55.9%—male absentees. | Presentees are significantly more likely to complete the prescribed functional restoration treatment program, return to work, retain work 1-year post-treatment, and not to have a decrease in job demand from preinjury to post-treatment. Both employers and employees will benefit if the ill or injured employee SAW post-injury instead of taking short- or long-term disability leave. |
(Hernandez and McDonald 2010) U.S. | To examine the costs and benefits of workers with and without disabilities within three sectors: healthcare, retail, and hospitality. | Cross-sectional. Quantitative. SPSS. | 314 employees with hearing loss, cognitive impairments, physical disabilities, and chronic illnesses (95 with and 219 without disabilities). N.A. | The Business Survey (the company’s duration of operation, size and makeup of the workforce): from employers. The Employee Survey (disability status, job title, and department): from employees. The Cost–Benefit Survey (cost–benefit information on workers with disabilities). | N.A. N.A. | Job performance and supervision were similar for both groups of employees. However, findings were mixed when tenure, absenteeism, and worker’s compensation claims were considered. Lastly, the costs of accommodation were minimal. EWDs across the three sectors were nearly equivalent to those without disabilities in overall job performance. |
(Meijster et al. 2011) The Netherlands | To evaluate cost–benefit ratios for different stakeholders (employers, employees, and society (taxpayers)). | Cross-sectional. Quantitative (the human capital method). Excel. | Bakery workers with occupational asthma and rhinitis. N.A. | N.A. | N.A. | The use of the model-based approach enables investigation of those parameters most likely to impact the effectiveness and costs of interventions for work-related diseases. |
(Wan et al. 2013) The U.S. | To compare the indirect costs of productivity loss between MBC and EBC patients, as well as their respective family members. | Longitudinal. Quantitative. SAS, version 9.2 | 139 MBC, 432 EBC, and 820 controls (for sick leave). 432 MBC, 1552 EBS, and 4682 controls (for STD). N.A. | CCI. | 49 years—MBC patients, 51 years—EBC patients, 50 years—controls, 51 years—family population. 100%—female MBC patients, EBC patients, controls, 99.9%—male from the family population (spouse). | MBC patients had significantly higher STD costs than EBC patients and the control groups. They had more sick leave costs than the control groups. Productivity loss and associated costs in MBC patients were substantially higher than in EBC patients or the general population. |
(Selekler et al. 2013) Turkey | To measure productivity losses from absenteeism and presenteeism caused at a heavy manufacturing company. | Cross-sectional. Quantitative. SPSS, version 15.0. | 7.200 employees with headache problems in a heavy manufacturing company. N.A. | The HALT Index was translated into the Turkish language (the existence of headaches as a health problem). | 32.7 years (range 20-55). 94.4%—male. | Possible factors were the nature of the work—manual labour for two-thirds, often heavy—and the recurring schedule disturbances of shift work. |
(Walsh et al. 2014) The U.S. | To explore and characterise the relationship between fatigue and presenteeism among employed participants of the Utah Psoriasis Initiative Arthritis (UPI Arthritis) registry. | Cross-sectional. Quantitative. N.A. | 107 employees with a diagnosis of PsA. N.A. | The 8-item WLQ (a shortened version of the original 25-item WLQ) (WPL and Presenteeism). Question 1 from BASDAI#1: “How would you describe the overall level of fatigue/tiredness you have experienced?” (Fatigue). Question 1 from the PsAQOL#1: “I feel tired whatever I do” (fatigue). PGA (cutaneous psoriasis severity). Question 4 from the DLQI#4: “Over the past week, how itchy, painful, sore or stinging has your skin been?” (Psoriasis pain and itch). Question 4 from PsAQOL#4: “I feel there is no enjoyment in my life” (depressed mood). | 47.0 years—no fatigue, 48.4 years—fatigue, 47.5 years—low fatigue, 48.0 years—high fatigue. 60.4%—males with no fatigue, 51.9% —males with fatigue, 62.8%— males with low fatigue, and 51.6%— males with high fatigue. | WPL was associated with fatigue. The association was not entirely explained by the evaluated musculoskeletal, cutaneous, or psychiatric manifestations of PsA. |
(Song et al. 2015) The U.S. | To quantify WA and STD hours and costs associated with CVERP in U.S. employees with high cardiovascular risk. | Longitudinal. Quantitative. N.A. | 5,808 WA-eligible, 21,006 STD-eligible, and 3,362 combined WA- and STD-eligible patients with CVERP and patients without CVERP. N.A. | N.A. | 52.2-53.1 years. 81.3-86.8%—male. | During the first month of follow-up, patients with CVERP had more WA/STD-related hours lost compared with patients without CVERP. CVERP was associated with substantial work loss and indirect costs. Prevention or reduction of CVERP could result in WA- and STD-related cost savings for employers. |
(Zhang et al. 2016) Canada | To measure and compare the relationship between chronic diseases and the number of absent workdays due to health problems and the associated costs. | Cross-sectional. Quantitative (the human capital approach). SAS, version 9.4. | 28,678 employees with 16 chronic conditions (asthma, fibromyalgia, arthritis, back problems, migraine, COPD, diabetes, heart disease, cancer, intestinal or stomach ulcers, urinary incontinence bowel disorders, chronic fatigue syndrome, multiple chemical sensitivities, mood disorders, and anxiety disorders). N.A. | How many days of work have you missed because of a chronic condition? How many days … because of an injury? How many days … because of an infectious disease? How many days … because of another reason related to your own physical or mental health? | 40.94 years. 45.4%—female. | The average number of absent workdays due to health problems was 1.35 days over 3 months. The 3 conditions with the greatest association with absent workdays were mood disorders, heart disease, and bowel disorders. |
(Jammaers et al. 2016) Belgium | To get a fine-grained understanding of how disabled employees engage with the institutionalised discourse of disability as lower productivity. | Cross-sectional. Qualitative (in-depth semi-structured interviews). N.A. | 30 disabled employees with chronic illnesses (chronic depression, fibromyalgia, dyslexia), hearing impairments, visual impairments, mobility impairments, wheelchair users, and 3 disability/diversity experts. Purposive sampling. | Could you describe how your disability affects your job? Would you say you have similar productivity compared with other colleagues performing a similar job? Do you think others in this organisation (colleagues/supervisor) believe that you are less productive? | N.A. 50%—male | Disabled employees performed their job welland even better than some other colleagues. |
(Lysaght et al. 2017) Canada | To understand inclusion through work and productivity for persons with IDD. | Cross-sectional. Qualitative (semi-structured interviews). NVIVO (Grounded Theory approach). | Employees with IDD (Down’s syndrome, ASD, Asperger syndrome, a concurrent physical disability, Fragile X, mental health disability, foetal alcohol syndrome) and their caregivers (parents, siblings, support workers and a spouse). Purposive sampling. | The Scales of Independent Behaviour-Short Form (the level of independent functioning). Questions (participant’s experience of working, his/her attitudes toward work, choice of work, job satisfaction, and preferences, experiences at work). | 34 years. 59.5%—male. | Productivity, whether paid or unpaid, can be an avenue to social inclusion. The experience of inclusion, particularly of belonging, depends on a successfully negotiated congruence between worker attributes and the social features and demands of the work environment. |
(Merola et al. 2018) The U.S. | To compare the extent of disability benefits, use and resultant workplace productivity loss among U.S. adult patients with newly diagnosed MM who received oral versus injectable MM therapy. | Longitudinal. Quantitative. Stata MP, version 14.1. | 299 patients with newly diagnosed MM (73 received oral therapy and 226 received injectable therapy). N.A. | CCI (comorbidity burden before each subject’s index date). WAB, STD, and LTD claim files (productivity loss). | 52 years—patients who used oral chemotherapy, 51 years—patients who used injectable chemotherapy. 66%—male patients who used oral chemotherapy, 71%—male patients who used injectable chemotherapy. | Patients newly diagnosed with MM faced significant losses in productivity. Patients receiving injectable MM therapy used significantly more disability benefits and incurred higher production costs, compared with those receiving oral MM therapy. |
(Wong et al. 2020) Malaysia | To determine the impact of migraine on productivity and monetary loss among employees in the banking sector. | Cross-sectional. Quantitative. SPSS, version 20.0. | 598 employees with migraine in 2 multinational banking sectors. N.A. | IPAQ (demographic characteristics, anthropometric measurements and physical activity). ID Migraine Questionnaire (migraine). MIDAS (impact of migraine on work productivity and activities). WPAI Questionnaire. | 39.7%—between 31 and 40 years of age. 71.9%—female. | The costs related to presenteeism were 3.5 times higher than with absenteeism. |
(Keramat et al. 2020) Australia | To examine gender differences in the longitudinal association between obesity and disability with absenteeism in the workplace. | Longitudinal. Quantitative. Stata, version 14.0. | 117,769 observations for 19,851 obese, overweight, and/or disabled workers. N.A. | The guidelines of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) under the WHO framework (the disability of an adult). | N.A. (in total). 51.1%—male. | Disability was positively associated with longer days of absence among male workers. The rate of absenteeism was 1.82, 1.61, and 2.63 times higher among overweight, obese, and female workers with disabilities, respectively, compared with their lower-weight counterparts. |
(Haw et al. 2020) Philippines | To evaluate the burden and impact of migraine on work productivity in selected workplaces. | Cross-sectional. Quantitative. Stata IC, version 15.1. | 511 employees who were suspected or diagnosed with migraine. N.A. | The ID-Migraine test (migraine). MIDAS questionnaire (migraine severity and impact on work productivity). SF-36 Questionnaire (QoL). | 31.6 years. 67.5%—female. | Migraine poses a significant threat to work productivity. Many opportunities such as disease management and the introduction of alternative options for migraine treatment, may be introduced to help address these issues. |
(Yuen et al. 2021) The USA | To assess the impact of acromegaly on employees’ health benefit (direct and indirect) costs and absenteeism. | Longitudinal. Quantitative. SAS Enterprise, version 7.15. | 47 employed patients with an acromegaly diagnosis and 940 controls. N.A. | N.A. | 47.8 years—employees with acromegaly, 45.7 years—employees without acromegaly. 40.4%—female employees with acromegaly, 46.7%—female employees without acromegaly. | The presence of acromegaly is associated with increased direct and indirect employee health benefit costs and increased work absenteeism. |
(Shimizu et al. 2021) Japan | To assess the impact of migraine and other headache disorders and the cost and productivity losses in the workplace. | Cross-sectional. Quantitative. Stata, version 15.0. | 2458 employees in IT companies with M, TTH, M/TTH, HA, and NHA. N.A. | SF-12x2 Japanese version (HRQoL). MIDAS (the severity of impact on work and daily life). WPAI Questionnaire (the severity of impact on work and daily life). | 44.5 years—M, 46.9 years—TTH, 45.5 years—M/TTH, 44.2 years—HA, 46.0 years—NHA. N = 205—male with M, N = 1093—male with TTH, N = 61—male with M/TTH, N = 265—male with HA, N = 339—male with NHA. | This study revealed a high prevalence and disease burden among employees with migraine that is associated with substantial losses in productivity and employer cost. Presenteeism causes more economic losses than absenteeism. |
(Bonafede et al. 2021) The USA | To examine the indirect burden of employed MS patients initiating DMT. | Longitudinal. Quantitative. WPS, version 4.1 and R, version 3.5.1. | DMT-treated MS patients (DMT users) and Direct-matched controls without MS. N.A. | N.A. | 41.4 years—DMT users. 62.1%—female DMT users. | Compared with injectable DMT users, oral DMT users took twice as long to initiate therapy but had numerically lower absenteeism costs and significantly lower long-term disability costs in the first year after DMT initiation. Employed DMT users in the U.S. incurred an incremental increase in indirect burden compared with the matched control groups. |
(Rodriguez Llorian et al. 2022) Canada | To analyse work productivity loss and costs, including absenteeism, presenteeism and unpaid work loss, as well as its association with clinical, sociodemographic, and work-related factors. | Cross-sectional. Quantitative. N.A. | 512 employed people with MS. N.A. | VOLP Questionnaire (productivity loss components. EDSS (the severity of disease). MFIS (fatigue. PHQ-9 (depression). GAD-7 (anxiety). EQ-5D-5L (HRQoL utility). | 39 years. 71%—female. | Total productivity time loss over 3 months averaged 60 hours per patient, with an hourly paid productivity loss that was greater than the wage loss. Fatigue retained significant associations with all productivity loss outcomes. |
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Gulyamova, S.T.; Abdul Aziz, S.F.; Omar, N.H.; Mohd, R.H. Workplace-Related Socioeconomic Issues Associated with Job Performance and Productivity among Employees with Various Impairments: A Systematic Literature Review. Soc. Sci. 2023, 12, 275. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12050275
Gulyamova ST, Abdul Aziz SF, Omar NH, Mohd RH. Workplace-Related Socioeconomic Issues Associated with Job Performance and Productivity among Employees with Various Impairments: A Systematic Literature Review. Social Sciences. 2023; 12(5):275. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12050275
Chicago/Turabian StyleGulyamova, Saodat Tolibovna, Siti Fardaniah Abdul Aziz, Nik Hairi Omar, and Rusyda Helma Mohd. 2023. "Workplace-Related Socioeconomic Issues Associated with Job Performance and Productivity among Employees with Various Impairments: A Systematic Literature Review" Social Sciences 12, no. 5: 275. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12050275
APA StyleGulyamova, S. T., Abdul Aziz, S. F., Omar, N. H., & Mohd, R. H. (2023). Workplace-Related Socioeconomic Issues Associated with Job Performance and Productivity among Employees with Various Impairments: A Systematic Literature Review. Social Sciences, 12(5), 275. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12050275