Paid Sick Leave Key for Using Preventive Care
Services; Workers without Paid Sick Leave 1.6 Times Less Likely to Get a Flu
Shot
Credit: Florida Atlantic University
Regardless of sociodemographic
factors, workers who lack paid sick leave were significantly less likely to
have received preventive health care screenings in the last 12 months, even
among those previously told that they have a condition such as diabetes or
cardiovascular disease that places them at higher medical risk.
Newswise, May 18, 2017 — More than
20 million Americans have gained health insurance coverage through the
Affordable Care Act (ACA) and do not have to pay for 15 preventive screenings
recommended by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force.
Yet, despite this advantage, many
are not utilizing these lifesaving screenings and are contributing to this
nation’s soaring health care costs, which reached a whopping $3 trillion in
2014.
Researchers from Florida Atlantic
University and Cleveland State University are the first to use data after the
implementation of the ACA to get to the root of what factors are contributing
to the low rates of preventive care use in this country.
Results of their study, published in
the current issue of the journal Preventive Medicine, illuminate the importance
of the role paid sick leave benefits plays in the lives of employees and
ultimately in public health.
“Compared to 22 similarly developed
countries, the United States is the only one that does not mandate employers to
provide paid sick leave benefits or include paid sick leave in a universal
social insurance plan,” said LeaAnne DeRigne, Ph.D., lead author and an
associate professor in the School of Social Work within FAU’s College for
Design and Social Inquiry.
For the study, DeRigne and
collaborators used cross-sectional data from a sample of 13,545 adults aged
18-64 with current paid employment from the 2015 National Health Interview
Survey (NHIS).
They examined the relationship
between having paid sick leave and obtaining eight preventive care services:
blood pressure check; cholesterol check; fasting blood sugar check; getting a
flu shot; being seen by a medical doctor or health care provider; getting a Pap
test (females only); getting a mammogram (females only); and getting tested for
colon cancer.
The analysis controlled for
demographic and other important predictor variables including gender, marital
status, education, race/ethnicity, full time work, insurance coverage, health
status, limiting health conditions, family income, age, and family size.
Regardless of sociodemographic
factors, the researchers found that workers who lack paid sick leave were
significantly less likely to have received preventive health care screenings in
the last 12 months, even among those previously told that they have a condition
such as diabetes or cardiovascular disease that places them at higher medical
risk.
They also found that workers without
paid sick leave are 1.6 times less likely to have received a flu shot in the
past 12 months.
Key findings from the study reveal
that American workers without paid sick leave had odds that were:
• 30 percent less likely to have had
a blood pressure check in the last 12 months• 40 percent less likely to have
had a cholesterol check in the last 12 months • 24 percent less likely to have
had a fasting blood sugar check in the last 12 months• 61 percent less likely
to have had a flu shot in the last 12 months • 19 percent less likely to have
seen or talked to a physician or health care provider in the last 12 months •
23 percent less likely to have had a Pap test in the last 12 months
Paid sick leave was not, however, a
significant factor in having undergone two cancer-related screenings in the
last 12 months: testing for colon cancer or a mammogram.
The researchers speculate that
because mammography services are more widely available to workers because of
mobile screening units and other innovative services, getting a mammogram might
not require paid sick leave.
They note that because colon cancer
screenings are recommended every 10 years, respondents may not have had the
test within the past 12 months when they answered that question.
“Our findings demonstrate that even
when insured adults are provided with free preventive screenings, paid sick
leave is a significant factor associated with actually using the screenings,”
said DeRigne.
“American workers risk foregoing
preventive health care, which could lead to the need for medical care at later
stages of disease progression and at a higher cost for workers and the American
health care system as a whole.”
The two most common ways to offer
paid sick leave is by mandating employer-funded benefits or through a universal
social insurance program funded through taxes.
The Healthy Families Act, introduced
in Congress in 2015, uses the employer-funded model and would allow workers to
earn up to seven days of paid sick leave if their employer has more than 15
employees and seven unpaid days for employers who have less than 15 employees.
The bill has not yet been introduced
in the current Congressional session. “Our data can be used by health care
professionals, policy makers and others to consider the expansion of access to
evening and weekend hours as well as mobile, community-based, and workplace
health and wellness services,” said Patricia Stoddard-Dare, Ph.D., co-author
and an associate professor of social work at Cleveland State.
“When workers forgo essential
preventive health care such as flu shots, the public health implications are immense.
This is particularly relevant for service related employees, food preparation
workers and others who have low access to paid sick leave coverage.”
The article also was co-authored by
Cyleste C. Collins, Ph.D., assistant professor at Cleveland State University,
and Linda Quinn, Ph.D., college associate lecturer in the Department of
Mathematics at Cleveland State University.
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