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New Health and Work Service to get long-term sick back to work | New Health and Work Service to get long-term sick back to work |
(about 9 hours later) | |
People off sick for more than four weeks are to be offered advice to get them back to work more quickly under a scheme being set up by the government. | |
The Health and Work Service, which will cover England, Wales and Scotland, will offer non-compulsory medical assessments, starting in April. | |
It will be run by the private sector and paid for by scrapping compensation to employers for statutory sick pay. | |
Ministers say employers will save money overall by having fewer staff off sick. | |
They said it may save companies up to £70m a year in reduced sickness pay and related costs. | |
No law change | |
The new scheme will not entail any change to existing laws. | |
At present, staff who are off work for more than four weeks are considered to be long-term sick and entitled to Statutory Sick Pay of almost £90 per week from their employers. | |
That will not change under the new arrangements - but the government wants the Health and Work Service to cut the number of people on long-term sick leave. | |
Under the scheme, employers or GPs will be able to refer employees for a work-focused occupational health assessment. | |
This is intended to identify the issues preventing an employee from returning to work and draw up a plan for them, their GP and their employer, recommending how the employee can be helped back to work more quickly. | |
This may include fitness for work advice, medical care, working from home or retraining. | |
The scheme is not compulsory. BBC business correspondent Joe Lynam says workers will be allowed to refuse to follow the course recommended. | |
'Outdated' | |
The service will be paid for by scrapping a compensation scheme for employers faced with high levels of sickness absence. | |
The Statutory Sick Pay Percentage Threshold Scheme (PTS) is being abolished from April. | The Statutory Sick Pay Percentage Threshold Scheme (PTS) is being abolished from April. |
The Department for Work and Pensions says PTS is "an outdated system which does nothing to promote or support active management of sickness absences by either the employer or employee". | |
Any financial loss to business from the ending of the PTS is expected to be offset by a reduction in lost working days, earlier return to work and increased economic output created by the new scheme, the DWP said. | Any financial loss to business from the ending of the PTS is expected to be offset by a reduction in lost working days, earlier return to work and increased economic output created by the new scheme, the DWP said. |
It said the new scheme should particularly benefit small businesses without access to occupational health services. | |
Forced back | |
Work and Pensions Minister Mike Penning said sickness absence had a "substantial impact" on workers, employers and taxpayers. | Work and Pensions Minister Mike Penning said sickness absence had a "substantial impact" on workers, employers and taxpayers. |
"As part of the government's long-term economic plan, we are taking action to get people back into work," he said. | "As part of the government's long-term economic plan, we are taking action to get people back into work," he said. |
"This is a triple-win. It will mean more people with a job, reduced cost for business, and a more financially secure future for Britain." | "This is a triple-win. It will mean more people with a job, reduced cost for business, and a more financially secure future for Britain." |
The Trades Union Congress said it supported the principles behind the move and that being in a rewarding job with a supportive employer could be good for your health. | |
But it said care should be taken over how the scheme was implemented. | |
The danger was that people would be forced back to work before they were well. | |
Britain's rate of absence through sickness is among the lowest in Europe and has halved over the past decade. |