Thursday, January 15, 2026
ADVT 
Life

Why Certain Employees Always Call In Sick

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 May, 2019 08:16 PM

    If you are tired of certain employees skipping work, look at the constitution of the team. According to an interesting study, women in purely male teams and older employees in very young teams are absent almost twice as much as their colleagues in teams where they have a good fit.


    Professor Florian Kunze and Max Reinwald from University of Konstanz in Germany investigated workplace behaviour of employees who are in the minority in their teams.


    The two researchers observed more than 800 teams in a big Swiss-based service company over the course of seven years.


    They focused on two attributes of new team members -- gender and age.


    They found that the more unequal a new team member, the earlier and the more easily they will find themselves in situations where they will be subject to discrimination.


    These so-called anchoring events then go on to shape the subjects' perceptions of teamwork for years to come.


    "Of course non-average team members don't automatically and constantly skip work! We have not been looking into individual workloads and performance or into individual work biographies, that remains for a follow-up study to tackle.


    ”Our study is limited to a blue-collar environment, where prejudices towards women and older co-workers are more pronounced. We can safely draw the conclusion that women in male-dominated, as well as older employees in younger environments experience more discrimination. And this experience of discrimination increases over time," said Professor Kunze.


    The team evaluated 2,711 persons -- date of team entry, team composition, team swaps, absenteeism -- all completely anonymously.


    "The trend is pretty obvious: during their first year on a new team, new members remain inconspicuous regardless of their fit.


    After that, the curve rises, and quite steeply in many cases. After a few years, women in purely male teams, and older employees in very young teams, are absent almost twice as much as their colleagues in teams where they have a good fit.


    "It comes down to about eight annual days of absence compared to four, which is pretty significant," said the researchers in a paper published in Academy of Management Journal.


    Reinwald and Kunze hope the results would give companies and organizations looking to increase diversity some pointers on how to do so successfully.


    "Employees that do not fit their teams demographically require increased attention and support, especially when just starting out - and team leaders ought to be sensitized to and prepared for these needs," they suggested.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Joke With Babies To Make Them Smart

    Joke With Babies To Make Them Smart
    Children as young as 16 months old learn important life skills from jokes and pretend play of parents, says a new study.

    Joke With Babies To Make Them Smart

    B.C. Village Points To Ongoing Harassment After Mayor Receives Phone Threats

    B.C. Village Points To Ongoing Harassment After Mayor Receives Phone Threats
    MCBRIDE, B.C. — A small community in British Columbia's central Interior says it plans to press charges once police identify an anonymous caller who allegedly threatened the mayor.

    B.C. Village Points To Ongoing Harassment After Mayor Receives Phone Threats

    30 Percent Of Women In India Now Regularly Watch Porn

    30 Percent Of Women In India Now Regularly Watch Porn
    When it comes to watching porn online, women are slowly bridging the gap in India with as much as 30 percent of women in India now regularly visiting porn websites

    30 Percent Of Women In India Now Regularly Watch Porn

    Study On Vancouver High School Students Reveals Bullies Have High Self-Esteem, Low Depression Rates

    Study On Vancouver High School Students Reveals Bullies Have High Self-Esteem, Low Depression Rates
    Researchers at Simon Fraser University surveyed a group of Vancouver high school students and got the results which oppose earlier assumptions about bullies.

    Study On Vancouver High School Students Reveals Bullies Have High Self-Esteem, Low Depression Rates

    Prone To Cheating? Blame Your Hormones

    Prone To Cheating? Blame Your Hormones
    People with higher levels of the reproductive hormone testosterone and the stress hormone cortisol are more likely to repeatedly engage in cheating and other unethical behaviour, a new study suggests.

    Prone To Cheating? Blame Your Hormones

    Grandparents' Love Can Make Kids Fat

    Grandparents' Love Can Make Kids Fat
    Grandparents are often extremely fond of their grandchildren but a study says that affection from grandparents may lead to childhood obesity.

    Grandparents' Love Can Make Kids Fat