User:M Groenewold/sandbox

Below is a proposed expansion of the Wikipedia article on public health surveillance. It would be a subtopic under the Syndromic surveillance heading.

Absenteeism surveillance
Studying the amount and patterns of health-related workplace absenteeism can be useful for public health surveillance. Data on school and workplace absenteeism have been used as nonspecific or syndromic indicators of the occurrence of influenza and other illness.

In the United States for example, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health routinely monitors absences specifically due to workers’ own illness, injury, or other medical issue among full-time workers, referred to as “health-related workplace absenteeism.”

Monitoring health-related absenteeism among workers is especially useful for assessing the population occurrence of some illnesses, such as influenza. Health-related workplace absenteeism data add to the conventional influenza surveillance conducted by CDC, which is mainly based on disease reporting from doctors and laboratory testing.

During influenza season, many people will get sick, but not go to a doctor. Often, people who are sick won’t go to work, which is why absenteeism data can be a good resource for monitoring the progression, severity and impact of seasonal epidemics or pandemics. It is known that the amount of health-related absenteeism is strongly related to the amount of influenza-like illness occurring at about the same time. Because of this, absenteeism provides additional information to measure the overall impact of influenza outbreaks and pandemics.

Surveillance of health-related workplace absenteeism across the U.S. is also intended to help: doctors, other healthcare personnel, employers and workers be more informed about disease occurrence and severity during an influenza pandemic and during seasonal epidemics; public health authorities better target prevention messages and evaluate how well pandemic control measures work; and emergency responders prepare for future pandemics.