4.2 Article

Dose-response relationship between alcohol consumption and workplace absenteeism in Australia

Journal

DRUG AND ALCOHOL REVIEW
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/dar.13726

Keywords

absenteeism; alcohol consumption; Australia; employee; workplace

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Workplace absenteeism is a significant issue in Australia, with alcohol-related absences driving the majority of productivity losses. This study aims to examine the relationship between alcohol consumption and absenteeism among Australian workers, finding that higher levels of alcohol consumption and more frequent heavy episodic drinking are associated with increased odds of alcohol-related absences. However, there is no significant association between regular alcohol consumption and broader sickness absences.
Introduction: Workplace absenteeism is a burden in Australia. The estimated productivity losses due to alcohol were around $4.0 billion in 2017, with absenteeism driving 90% of these costs. We aim to determine the dose-response relationship between average daily alcohol consumption and heavy episodic drinking (HED) frequency and workplace absenteeism amongst Australian workers.Methods: We used the 2019 National Drug Strategy Household Survey of Australian employed workers aged =20 years to 69 years old. Respondents' average daily alcohol consumption was categorised into four: abstainers, light to moderate (1-20 g of alcohol/day), risky (>20-40 g of alcohol/day) and high-risk (>40 g of alcohol/day). HED was classified into four frequency measures (never, less than monthly, monthly, weekly). The outcome variables came from dichotomised measures of: (i) absence due to alcohol consumption; and (ii) broader sickness absence-absence due to illness or injury in the previous 3 months.Results: Risky (adjusted odds ratio 4.74 [95% CI 2.93-7.64]) and high-risk drinking (adjusted odds ratio 6.61 [95% CI 4.10-10.68]) were linked to increased odds of alcohol-related absence. Higher HED frequency was significantly associated with alcohol-related and broader sickness absenteeism. No significant associations exist between regular alcohol consumption and broader sickness absence in fully adjusted models.Discussion and Conclusions: Findings suggest that only HED is linked to broader sickness absence. However, there is a strong dose-response association between alcohol consumption and alcohol-related absences for both consumption measures amongst Australian workers. Population-level policies that reduce alcohol consumption to moderate level and less frequent HED might address workplace absenteeism.

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