(Press-News.org) Employers have to pay around £4,000 more a year to employ a member of staff who smokes compared to a non-smoking employee, finds research published online in the Tobacco Control journal.
US researchers found that several factors including absenteeism, smoking breaks and healthcare costs result in a greater cost to the employer for having a smoker on staff and this cost could help inform their workplace tobacco policies.
The risks to a person's health from smoking include a higher risk of developing cancer, heart or lung disease and currently around 10 million adults smoke in Great Britain – a sixth of the population – while around 19% of the adult population in the US are smokers.
Previous studies have found that smoking by employees costs businesses money because of smoking-attributable productivity losses and medical expenditures, but estimates have been vague and did not distinguish between costs borne by employers and those absorbed by others – the smokers themselves, insurance companies, or taxpayers.
A team of researchers from the College of Public Health & Moritz College of Law at The Ohio State University in the US set out to calculate a more precise excess financial cost for private employers to have an employee who smokes, compared with a non-smoking member of staff.
Their study was carried out in the context of some US employers having begun to charge smokers higher premiums for health insurance, while others have decided they will only hire non-smokers. Some firms have even decided they will no longer retain employees who do not quit smoking within a given period of time.
The researchers reviewed and analysed previous studies on the subject to estimate certain discrete costs associated with smoking employees.
They then developed a cost estimation approach that approximates the total of such costs for US employers and examined absenteeism, presenteesim (lower productivity while working because of nicotine addiction), smoking breaks, healthcare costs and pension benefits for smokers.
Calculations showed that low productivity due to excess absenteeism costs employers, on average, $517 (£344) a year per smoking employee; presenteeism cost $462 (£307); smoking breaks cost $3,077 (£2,045); and excess healthcare cost $2,056 (£1,367).
In addition, because smokers tend to die at a younger age than non-smokers, annual pension costs were an average of $296 (£195) less for an employee who smoked. The total estimated additional cost to the employer came to $5,816 (£3,865) per year.
The researchers concluded: "Employees who smoke impose significant excess costs on private employers. The results of this study may help inform employer decisions about tobacco-related policies.
"It is important to remember that the costs imposed by tobacco use are not simply financial costs. It is not possible to put a price on the lost lives and the human suffering caused by smoking. The desire to help one's employees lead healthier and longer lives should provide an additional impetus for employers to work towards eliminating tobacco from the workplace."
###
[Estimating the cost of a smoking employee. Online First doi10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2012-050888]
Staff who smoke cost companies thousands of pounds more to employ
Average employee who smokes costs around £4,000 more a year than a non-smoker due to time off, smoking breaks and healthcare costs
2013-06-04
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Surgery for obsessive compulsive disorder sufferers is safe and effective
2013-06-04
Around half of people with an extreme form of obsessive compulsive disorder responded well to a type of psychosurgery that proved to be safe and effective, according to research published online in the Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, & Psychiatry.
Researchers from Canada have now recommended physicians should consider this approach in helping people with OCD who have not responded to any other type of treatment.
Obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) is a psychiatric disease which leads to anxiety-provoking thoughts (obsessions) causing repeated, time-consuming behaviors ...
Less than half of dying patients are placed on a nationally recommended care pathway
2013-06-04
Less than half of terminally ill patients are placed on the Liverpool Care Pathway for the Dying Patient (LCP) despite it being recommended nationally, concludes UK research published online in the BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care journal.
Durham University researchers found that in many parts of England, staff may have limited training or support to use the care pathway, which is a model of care that enables healthcare professionals to focus on care in the last hours or days of life when a death is expected.
The pathway was jointly developed by the Marie Curie Hospice ...
Enzyme from wood-eating gribble could help turn waste into biofuel
2013-06-04
Scientists have discovered a new enzyme that could prove an important step in the quest to turn waste (such as paper, scrap wood and straw) into liquid fuel. To do this they turned to the destructive power of tiny marine wood-borers called 'gribble', which have been known to destroy seaside piers.
Using advanced biochemical analysis and X-ray imaging techniques, researchers from the University of York, University of Portsmouth and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in the USA have determined the structure and function of a key enzyme used by gribble to break down ...
Alzheimer's leaves clues in blood
2013-06-04
4th June 2013, Zaragoza, Spain – Alzheimer researchers in Spain have taken a step closer to finding a blood test to help in the diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease.
With approximately 75% of the estimated 36 million Alzheimer's sufferers worldwide yet to receive a reliable diagnosis, the potential impact on the lives of possible sufferers, present and future, could be huge.
Alzheimer's disease is a neurodegenerative disease most frequently affecting the elderly. The most commonly associated symptom is a progressive loss of memory to the stage in which the patient is ...
Study: Companies pay almost $6,000 extra per year for each employee who smokes
2013-06-04
COLUMBUS, Ohio – A new study suggests that U.S. businesses pay almost $6,000 per year extra for each employee who smokes compared to the cost to employ a person who has never smoked cigarettes.
Researchers say the study is the first to take a comprehensive look at the financial burden for companies that employ smokers.
By drawing on previous research on the costs of absenteeism, lost productivity, smoke breaks and health care costs, the researchers developed an estimate that each employee who smokes costs an employer an average of $5,816 annually above the cost of ...
Earth's Milky Way neighborhood gets more respect
2013-06-04
Our Solar System's Milky Way neighborhood just went upscale. We reside between two major spiral arms of our home galaxy, in a structure called the Local Arm. New research using the ultra-sharp radio vision of the National Science Foundation's Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) indicates that the Local Arm, previously thought to be only a small spur, instead is much more like the adjacent major arms, and is likely a significant branch of one of them.
"Our new evidence suggests that the Local Arm should appear as a prominent feature of the Milky Way," said Alberto Sanna, of ...
Despite good prognosis, some turn a blind eye to genetic screening
2013-06-04
Even if Australians with newly diagnosed bowel cancer were routinely tested for a genetic predisposition to further cancers, one in three people would still not take the necessary steps to use that information to prevent further disease.
Researchers from UNSW Medicine took the extra step of screening for the hereditary Lynch syndrome in the 2,100 people with colorectal cancer who presented at a number of NSW hospitals* over a three-year period.
Researchers found that a significant number of these people (245) had a bowel cancer with features that suggested Lynch syndrome, ...
Emergency C-section rates are climbing, as is the need for accompanying emergency anesthesia
2013-06-04
There is an increasing need for safe emergency anaesthesia as cases of emergency Caesarean section (CS) continue to rise, say experts speaking at Euroanaesthesia, the annual congress of the European Society of Anaesthesiology (ESA).
Dr Geraldine O'Sullivan (Lead clinician for obstetric anaesthesia, Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK) discusses how in the UK between 25-30% of deliveries are by CS, well above the WHO recommended rate of 15% (England 25%, Scotland/Wales 26%, Northern Ireland 30%, UK overall 25%). The 25% overall rate in the UK is made ...
Time limits on welfare can lead to higher mortality rates
2013-06-04
U.S. workfare programs have been praised by some for cutting welfare rolls and improving the economic well-being of families. But little is known about how these policies affected participants' health and mortality. Researchers at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health studied enrollees in Florida's Family Transition Program who were given a time limit for welfare benefits and exposed to job training. They were compared to a control group who received traditional welfare benefits. In this randomized controlled trial, the researchers found that participants ...
Smoking, sugar, spirits and 'sin' taxes: Higher price would help health, Mayo Clinic doctors say
2013-06-04
ROCHESTER, Minn. -- Go ye and sin no more -- or pay for it, when it comes to junk food, smoking and consuming alcohol. That's the message from two Mayo Clinic physicians who say raising "sin" taxes on tobacco and alcoholic beverages and imposing them on sugary drinks and fatty foods would lead many people to cut back, improving public health. The article by Michael Joyner, M.D., and David Warner, M.D., appears in the June issue of the journal Mayo Clinic Proceedings.
The physicians contend that much of overall health depends on behavior and is relatively independent of ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Pioneering work generates feline embryonic stem cells in boon for cats
Decoding the link between colorectal cancer risk and steatotic liver disease
Controlling conformational changes in protein aromatic side chains
Experimental and numerical analysis of the potential drop method for defects caused by dynamic loads
Chinese researchers make breakthrough in artificial chiral structural-color microdomes
Intermittent fasting inhibits platelet activation to reduce thrombosis risk
A clear game-changer: Curtin’s water-repellent glass breaks new ground
Are our refrigerants safe? The lingering questions about the chemicals keeping us cool
How nitrogen reshapes root system architecture in plants?
‘Fluorescent phoenix’ discovered with persistence rivaling Marie Curie’s
A rapid and reproducible method for generating germ-free Drosophila melanogaster
Aging and the brain’s sugar-coated shield
Better poverty mapping: New machine-learning approach targets aid more effectively
An emissions tale of two cities: Salt Lake City vs. Los Angeles
WVU nursing faculty aim to enhance rural home care for chronically ill through NIH award
New screening tool for stroke survivors with visual perception problems
Influencer marketing can help tourism industry mitigate waste, pollution
Tufts named a top producer of U.S. Fulbright students
Material’s ‘incipient’ property could jumpstart fast, low-power electronics
In preparing children for a racially unequal society, families of colour can benefit from more support, study finds
Student refines 100-year-old math problem, expanding wind energy possibilities
Immunity against seasonal H1N1 flu reduces bird flu severity in ferrets, study suggests
Do starchy carbs cause cavities?
New study supports caution regarding use of steroids
Treatment strategy reprograms brain cancer cells, halting tumor growth
Digital program reduces fall risk and boosts strength in older adults
Why brain cancer is often resistant to immunotherapy
The Obesity Society commends FDA's resolution of obesity drug shortages, calls for enforcement against unauthorized compounding
A new path to recovery: Scientists uncover key brain circuit in the fight against cocaine use disorder
Problem-based learning helps students stay in school
[Press-News.org] Staff who smoke cost companies thousands of pounds more to employAverage employee who smokes costs around £4,000 more a year than a non-smoker due to time off, smoking breaks and healthcare costs