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Most Americans view paid sick days as basic worker right

Published on June 22, 2010 at 6:49 AM · No Comments

Paid sick leave is a benefit prized by American workers but frequently missing on the job — a situation that leads to serious consequences, a new study released Monday by the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago shows.

The study found about one in three working Americans does not have paid sick leave, and that nearly one in six people lost their job for taking time off to deal with a personal or family illness.

In the survey, commissioned by the Public Welfare Foundation in Washington, D.C., researchers also found that three out of four respondents consider paid sick days a basic workers' right, and an equal amount think employers should be required to provide the benefit.

"Americans overwhelmingly view paid sick days as a basic labor standard," said Tom W. Smith, a Senior Fellow at the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago and director of the study, "Paid Sick Days: Attitudes and Experiences."

Those surveyed favored seven sick days per year for employees, with part-time workers earning sick days proportionate to their time working.

"What was so striking about the findings was that a strong majority of people across in every racial group, every income level, every age group, every part of the country and both political parties see paid sick days as a basic worker right, just like being paid a decent wage," said Deborah Leff, president of the Public Welfare Foundation.

"We know that more than 40 million working Americans do not get even one paid sick day. And we can see from this survey that not having paid sick days drives up the costs of health care and means that more people go to work sick, creating public health risks for everyone," she added.

Among other findings from the survey:

• 55 percent of those without paid sick day coverage have gone to work with a contagious disease such as the flu, compared to 37 percent of those with paid sick days.

• 20 percent of those without paid sick day coverage used the emergency rooms of hospitals because they couldn't take time off, compared to 10 percent of the covered population.

• 24 percent of those without sick day coverage sent a sick child to school, compared to 14 percent with coverage.

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