The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Lack of paid sick days worst for poor workers, Hispanics

- By Alexia Elejalde-Ruiz

Amid the swelling national conversati­on about income inequality comes a new report spotlighti­ng that the lack of mandatory paid sick leave in the U.S. disproport­ionately burdens Hispanics and lowwage workers, including the vast majority of food service employees.

Forty percent of employed U.S. adults, or about 51 million people, get no paid sick days, forcing them to choose between a paycheck and time off to nurse the flu, take care of a sick family member or visit the doctor, and sometimes risking the loss of their job, according to a report by the Institute for Women’s Policy Research.

Those who do have sick time barely use it. Forty-five percent of workers with paid sick days had not used any in the previous 12 months; 5 percent had used 11 or more days. Among those with paid sick days who took fewer than 11 days off (this group was the focus to eliminate outliers with extended medical leaves), the median usage was 2.1 days.

Employees without sick days took a median of 1.6 days off due to illness or injury, suggesting that some are going to work sick, forgoing preventive care or sending sick children to school, the report said.

Long criticized for being the only advanced economy not to mandate that employers provide any type of paid time off, the U.S. has left it to states and cities to implement their own laws.

Access to paid sick leave varies among groups, according to the report, which uses data from the 2014 National Health Interview Survey. Less than a fifth of food preparatio­n and service workers have access to paid sick days, while close to 90 percent of employees who work in computers, architectu­re and engineerin­g do. Other occupation­s short on sick days are personal care/service (which includes jobs such as manicurist­s and child care workers) and farming/ fishing/forestry; in those two categories, a quarter of workers get paid sick days.

Among Hispanics, who fill a lot of service jobs, just 46 percent get paid sick days, far fewer than whites and blacks, at 63 and 62 percent, respective­ly, and Asians, at 67 percent.

The lower you are on the totem pole, the less likely it is that you can take a sick day off. Twothirds of supervisor­s get sick days, compared with fewer than half of nonsupervi­sory workers. While 86 percent of workers who make more than $65,000 a year get paid sick leave, less a quarter who make less than $15,000 a year do; among part-time workers in the lowest earnings bracket, just 14 percent get the perk.

Dr. Peter Mayock, site medical director of an Erie Family Health Center location in Chicago, sees the fallout daily from people delaying care when they can’t take off from work or even make an appointmen­t in advance because they don’t know their work schedule until the last minute. It is particular­ly acute among patients with chronic illnesses, who require frequent followups, he said.

 ?? CHICAGo TrIBuNE ?? Dr. Peter Mayock (right) says some patients delay care when they can’t take off from work. People with chronic illnesses are particular­ly harmed, he says.
CHICAGo TrIBuNE Dr. Peter Mayock (right) says some patients delay care when they can’t take off from work. People with chronic illnesses are particular­ly harmed, he says.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States