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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

That actually being good a your job comes second to your absence record.

105 replies

Dollymixtureyumyum · 19/11/2015 12:46

Just come to the end of my six month probation period at work, 3 other staff do the same job and we work as a team.
Due to having to go into hospital for a chest infection I was off for 3 days, another of my colleagues was off for four days with bad sickness.
Me and this collegeue have met and greatly exceeded our targets dispite being off and have had great evaluations from our clients, not had one bad one.
Two other colleagues have has no time off but have not met two of their targets and one even had two clients complain about his attitude. Their evaluation scores are not as high as me and colleague who has been off.
Guess which two have passed their probation period and which two have had theirs extended!!!

It's just so frustrating it was the same in my last job if you managed to get your arse in all year you got a bonus no matter how crap you where at the job. No bonus for actually meeting targets and being good.
Now I see schools are going the same way. I was off for most of my first two years of high school in and out of hospital for operation and I still came out with 10 GCSEs at grade C and over. Yet if a kid has two weeks off all hell breaks lose with nasty letters and warnings about attendance targets.
People get ill, it is a fact of life. Of course some people take the piss with absence and they should of course be delt with but I really think firms and schools need to realise that the majority of people only take time off when they absolutely need to and to not put (reasonable) absence levels above performance.

OP posts:
rookiemere · 24/11/2015 18:24

Thing is as well, when you stop being unable to predict if a colleague is going to be there or not, you start working on the assumption that they won't be.

My sporadic dotted line boss actually dialled into a meeting today ( although still needed to leave early due to another adult family members hospital meeting, despite having had most of last week off) and as I've got to the point where I have no idea if they will turn up or not, I did all of it as it's less stressful to do the extra work in advance than having a hole in the middle of things when they don't.

The person in question is good at their job when there, and is a nice person, but I never, ever want to work with them again.

I'd like to work for a company that has a consistant policy for sickness. Ours is a large organisation and is meant to, but apparently not once you get to a certain level.

EBearhug · 25/11/2015 02:11

I think having the option to work from home should reduce sickness levels overall. We are actively encouraged not to come in with bad colds or dodgy stomachs - why infect everyone else when you can keep your germs to yourself and still be working? (Because I don't see why I should be the only one suffering, is my usual response. I like to share... I do stay home though.)

It's not possible to do that in all roles though.

Absence is disruptive - we have one guy who has missed about 40 days on and off this year, all signed off by the doctor, and nearly all because of chronic bronchitis. It's not a major issue, in that we're running a bit short on work at times anyway, but it still means the rest of us have to readjust our plans because of having to cover his work too. (At least it means we won't have to redo so much of his work which isn't always as good as I'd expect, even when he is in.) But when workloads are at more usual levels, it would hit harder. And when he is in, he's a bit crap at keeping project statuses updated; that's probably the most difficult thing. If they were updated as they should be, we wouldn't have to waste so much time finding out what needs doing next - it would be easier to cover if so, and absenses would have less impact. Again, that sort of thing will vary according to role.

(I predict redundancies ahead. )

amitho · 25/11/2015 11:38

I've had d and v once in my entire life.

Why do people seem to get it so regularly???

winewolfhowls · 25/11/2015 13:24

I had D and v once in my whole life..until I had a child attending nursery. 4 times in last 18mths

EBearhug · 25/11/2015 18:37

Why do people seem to get it so regularly???

Stronger immune systems, exposure to different bacteria and viruses, differences in hand-washing techniques, differences in food-hygiene... loads of reasons. I'd have thought exposure to new germs was one of the main ones, given how it's often connected to being back at school or being abroad.

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