• Is Your Organization Worried about The Wrong Virus?

    Fever? Headache? Muscle aches? Many Canadians feel these symptoms in the coming months. This illness can’t be treated with antibiotics, will usually affect people for a week or more and will cost the Canadian economy billions of dollars. Many will die. If you’ve been paying attention to recent, terrifying headlines, you may assume the illness is the Ebola virus. Instead, the above description refers to seasonal flu. That’s one reason why doctors say this year it’s especially important for your employees not to get caught up in Ebola hysteria and forget to get their flu shots.

    The Impact of Flu on your organization

    Organizations will lose approximately 111 million workdays annually due to the flu, equalling $7 billion per year in sick days and lost productivity. This year is different for two reasons: First is the Ebola epidemic in West Africa that spread into the United States. The second is the late summer outbreak of enterovirus D68, a respiratory illness that has sickened more than 1,100 people in 46 states since August, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. The prospect of facing all three illnesses in a single season has led the CDC to start a public education campaign to help people understand the risks and to remind people to get their annual flu vaccine.

    Proactive Steps For Employers To Take

    Organizations can use this time of worry, confusion, and fear over the Ebola virus to educate their employees, help them identify the true risks and show them that you are invested in their well-being by hosting a flu clinic.

    “The important thing is to try and quell employee fear and panic and encourage employees to get a flu shot”  advices Dr. Craig Karpilow, Workplace Medical Corp.’s Occupation Health Director.

    On site flu clinics are a great choice for organizations big and small because:

    • On-site flu clinics are a convenient, quick and affordable way to get all your employees immunized at one time, in one place, without having them leave the work site or lose worker productivity.
    • On-site flu clinics ensure your employees are vaccinated and lessen the risk of spreading the virus to family and other high-risk groups.
    • On-site flu clinics ensure that your employees are protected if exposed to the virus from outside sources.
    • Many employees intend to get to the clinic and get their flu shot, but life gets in the way and they just never get around to it. Others know they should get to the clinic, but the thought of sitting in a packed waiting room is not appealing and they decide to wait until they’re not so busy – a time that never comes.
    • On-site clinics could mean fewer Ebola false alarms.
    • On-site flu clinic show your employees you are invested in their and their family’s health and well-being.

    Vaccinated employees experience:

    • 13 – 44% fewer doctor visits;
    • 18 – 45% fewer lost work days;
    • 18 – 28% fewer days with reduced productivity

    In addition to receiving the vaccine, public health officials urge people to practice the “3 Cs:” cover coughs and sneezes with a tissue or sleeve, contain germs by staying home when sick and clean hands often to stop the spread of flu germs.

    The Difference between Ebola and The Flu

    Statistically, seasonal flu viruses pose a much greater public health threat than the scary and highly covered, but relatively contained, Ebola. And unlike Ebola, a vaccine is widely available to protect people from seasonal flu viruses. Many symptoms of the flu are similar to the Ebola virus. However, there are big differences, too. Influenza causes cough, sore throat and runny nose, while Ebola does not. Ebola is far different from influenza, or “flu,” virus, in that the flu virus is transmissible through airborne droplets and is much more contagious, and therefore much more worrisome than Ebola, which can only be spread through bodily fluids. In the coming months, almost none of us will catch the Ebola virus. However, unlike Ebola, flu contributes to thousands of North American deaths each year and many more hospitalizations. And unlike Ebola, there’s a vaccine to protect against the flu, recommended annually for adults, teens, and children starting at 6 months of age. Protect your employees, their families, your community and your organization by making sure your employees are vaccinated this flu season.

  • Reducing Absences In The Flu Season Through On-Site Flu Clinics

    You already know that in the beginning of the fall season word starts to spread about the flu shot and the importance of protecting yourself from this highly contagious and prevalent virus. Why should you consider the flu shot in relation to your business? Below we explore the reasons why the flu may be costing your organization lost time and revenue, and why a convenient, on-site workplace flu clinic is the best way to protect your employees and your business.

    Flu and absenteeism

    The flu is a contagious respiratory illness caused by the influenza viruses that is spread very easily when people cough, sneeze, shake hands or touch an object that someone with the flu has touched.

    • The flu has detrimental effects on industry and employers alike, as it is the leading cause of lost time.
    • This represents thousands of dollars in lost productivity for your company and higher labor costs associated with replacing the worker who is absent.
    • The 2011 Direct Health Solutions Absenteeism Survey found organizations lose an average of $385 per day per employee in lost productivity when a staff member is away sick.
    • Each flu season, nearly 111 million workdays are lost due to the flu.
    • That equals approximately $7 billion per year in sick days and lost productivity.
    • The average flu-related absence is one work week.
    •  The flu cannot be treated with antibiotics.
    • Some corporations will have the healthy employees work overtime to keep up with the production demands when others are sick

     How on-site flu clinics can help

    On site flu clinics are a great choice for organizations big and small because:

    • On-site flu clinics are a convenient, quick and affordable way to get all your employees immunized at one time, in one place, without having them leave the work site or lose worker productivity.
    • On-site flu clinics ensure your employees are vaccinated and lessen the risk of spreading the virus to family and other high-risk groups.
    • On-site flu clinics ensure that your employees are protected if exposed to the virus from outside sources.
    • Many employees intend to get to the clinic and get their flu shot, but life gets in the way and they just never get around to it. Others know they should get to the clinic, but the thought of sitting in a packed waiting room is not appealing and they decide to wait until they’re not so busy – a time that never comes.

    Vaccinated employees experience:

    • 13 – 44% fewer doctor visits;
    • 18 – 45% fewer lost work days; and
    • 18 – 28% fewer days with reduced productivity

    Dealing with employee objections, fears, and misconceptions

    Some employees may hesitate to get the flu shot because they fear that the flu shot will give them the flu. In truth, flu is caused by a virus — and there’s no virus in the flu shot. There is no scientific evidence for — absolutely no truth — to the urban myth that vaccine will give you the flu. Rather, what the flu shot does is introduce your body to the killed virus so that it can develop a proper immune response in case you encounter the live virus later on in the flu season. Vaccinations are often in the new as people fear possible links between vaccinations and autism. This fear first surfaced because of thimerosal, a form of mercury used as a vaccine preservative, which was purported to be linked to autism but has since proven unrelated. As a precaution, thimerosal was removed from all childhood vaccines and most, but not all, flu shots in 2001.

    Final thoughts

    If money is tight, then you can’t afford to not host a workplace flu shot clinic! It will cost you approximately $16.00 to immunize an employee against the flu. Compare that to how much it will cost you to pay that employee’s sick benefits for a week, in addition to all the other indirect costs like production delays and having to bring in a replacement worker.

    Book your workplace on-site flu clinic today- contact us.