• Mayor Poopington
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    2014 months ago

    The argument against sick days is fucking bonkers to me. You want people to come in and get the rest of the office sick?? One of the many many reasons I prefer working from home.

    • @givesomefucks
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      554 months ago

      It’s not even that.

      In an office setting sick days literally help productivity, because metrics and workload should account for employee’s work hours.

      If someone’s on leave for a day, theyre taken out of production numbers.

      If they “tough it out” then production numbers say they should produce a normal days workload.

      You end up looking worse encouraging a work culture where people don’t take days off.

      • Mayor Poopington
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        164 months ago

        I don’t agree with measuring productivity that way. Coworker recently had covid, but they still worked from home. Granted, they put in maybe half the hours they would normally. But, boss was good with it as the alternative was zero work done at all. They still got some work done without burning any sick days.

          • @doingthestuff
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            54 months ago

            Yeah that doesn’t work for kitchen staff.

          • @Serinus
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            34 months ago

            Count your blessings. I’ve been sick enough to mute my work call while vomiting. (They needed me that day, and mostly I just needed to be on that call.)

            But I’ve absolutely had days where I couldn’t get far out of bed.

      • @Cryophilia
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        34 months ago

        If someone’s on leave for a day, theyre taken out of production numbers.

        Ha! Good one

    • @[email protected]
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      324 months ago

      I got a bad cold or something one time. I spent 2 weeks working from home then the boss told me to go to a doctor. Went and they found nothing so I had to come in. 1.5 weeks later I was over it but not before the rest of the office got pissed at me for getting them sick. I just told them I was forced to come in.

    • @WhatYouNeed
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      134 months ago

      That’s the problem with Gen Z: they don’t want to SHARE

    • @[email protected]
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      84 months ago

      It’s not so much the argument it’s workplace policies that say 6 or more days a year means you can be fired with cause. A late clock-in counts as half of one of those.

      At least that’s been standard at most places I’ve worked.

        • @[email protected]
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          24 months ago

          And I’ve learned it doesn’t want us unless we wanna be nomads or we really have something amazing to offer.

          (Maybe I’m setting the bar too high looking into Scandanavia lol)

      • Mayor Poopington
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        84 months ago

        That’s rough. Not even my shittier jobs have had that policy

  • @[email protected]
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    1544 months ago

    I worked really hard at my first year at a big company and didn’t take any sick days. During my performance review, I scored 4/5 for attendance, even though I arrived early for every shift and did every overtime opportunity. When I asked my manager, she said it’s policy not to hand out 5’s because it sends the message that there’s no room for improvement.

    No one could tell me how I could improve my attendance.

      • @[email protected]
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        174 months ago

        Naw, it wasn’t a bad experience overall, once I fell into the habit of mixing sick days with vacation days.

        They had some exploitable policies, doctors notes for 3+ sick days in a row but no questions asked about 1-2 days, vacation days with 2 weeks notice one day at a time with no right of refusal if there’s proper coverage.

        This meant you could book Wednesday to Friday off two weeks in a row, and call in sick Monday/Tuesday two weeks in a row, giving you 10 days off for the cost of 4 sick/ 6 vacay. Other exploitable shenanigans were possible around Stat holidays.

        The front line managers knew what the situation was, but HR never got wind unless something tripped the system,so if everyone works together on their sick days it was pretty good.

        • @Psythik
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          114 months ago

          Okay well then you don’t have to shame it; just name it.

        • @doingthestuff
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          54 months ago

          I’m 50. I’ve never had 10 days off in a row. I tried to plan two weeks last year and left but had to come back early.

          • @SupraMario
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            134 months ago

            Yea fuck that, take the PTO, don’t let anyone tell you to come back early.

        • @[email protected]
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          44 months ago

          Yo, heard. Reminds me of something familiar on my end as well. Nice when there’s a lil bit of wiggle room in a system like that. Gotta have a functional team though that can appreciate that work hard play hard work-life balance thing.

          Relatively recently got a decentish gig after only working “good bad jobs.” While the corporate culture shock is still abrasive at times, nice having some actual benefits and shit – other than being able to call in “sick” to fuck off or hang with the boyes without care or consequence. Have a decent stack of mandatory personal/sick days that renew annually.

          I can already tell I’m gonna be getting mighty ill around the holiday season, something definitely brewing.

      • @stoly
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        154 months ago

        This is pretty typical and not related to one specific company.

    • Lenny
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      274 months ago

      Always max out at 4/5 effort, so there’s always room to grow.

    • @[email protected]
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      84 months ago

      The reason is it makes the managers look good. They aren’t judhes on their productivity scores directly, but on how their scores are from last year/quarter. So they intentionally sabotage employees to make themselves look better.

    • @[email protected]
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      34 months ago

      Whenever I’m asked to give feedback on somebody when dealing with support, I always give full marks to the staff member, even if they couldn’t help much.

      It’s not their fault the company they work for is a load of shite.

  • @Sterile_Technique
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    764 months ago

    Surgical tech here. We have a couple boomer nurses (nurses… y’know… people who’ve taken microbiology and made it through nursing school… FUCK!) who think coming in to work when they’re sick is some kind of display of godlike work ethic.

    One of those fuckers came in with a stomach flu or some shit last fall, and proceeded to infect pretty much the entire department and who knows how many patients.

    We had so many call-ins through the following week or so, that we literally had to cancel a TON of surgeries because we just didn’t have the staff to do them.

    Good job, Nurse Karen. You really are a rockstar for sucking it up and coming in even when you didn’t feel good… all it cost was stabbing your entire team in the stomach, costing the hospital probably a few hundred thousand in lost revenue (then again, that shit should be free anyway, so, honestly fuck the hospital), and maybe killed a patient or two after coming to us when their body is already fucked to the point of needing to cut it open to fix something - yeah they don’t have the same immune system we do.

    Shit pisses me off. If you’re sick, stay the fuck at home!

    • @stoly
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      334 months ago

      Covid taught me that a nurse’s education is wholly inadequate. I also think they may be becoming irrelevant with so many specialized techs.

      • @Sterile_Technique
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        294 months ago

        I’m actually in nursing school right now - trying to switch over to the dark side!

        From what I’ve seen so far, at least judging entirely by the program I’m in / the half of it I’ve progressed through, the education side is fine.

        When I first became a tech, one of my culture-shocks way early on going into the medical field was that there are people at all levels who are just fucking stupid. Even doctors, who you’d assume are just all-around really intelligent people, are susceptible to the same bullshit that tricked grandpa into posting anti-vaxx rants on facebook.

        The kicker is that none of us are really ‘all around’ good or bad at anything. Aforementioned doctor might know the absolute shit out orthopedics because that’s what he studied; but the instant your orthopedic doc sticks his toe outside of that very specific bubble, crank the skepticism up to 11, even when it’s other medical topics… Dr. Bones starts ranting about epidemiology and I’m going to assume he got his education on that topic from Fox and twitter memes.

        Covid taught us that education takes a back-burner to values. If jeebus says vaccines are demon jizz, then vaccines are demon jizz. And the bar for the later is fucking low. Like, if a news anchor says a preecher said the vaccines are demon jizz… yup, they’re demon jizz! Whether or not it’s an actual part of you religion or w/e doesn’t matter (still waiting to see the part in scripture that says “covid vax bad; the other 500 vax you’ve gotten so far were all fine”), so long as some charismatic bobblehead confidently says it’s against your religion, suddenly it’s against your religion. Even if you’ve studied vaccines and know better “naw all those scientists lied. This new info is coming straight from GOD!

        …and the depressing part… dafuq do we do about it? We can’t just fire Nurse Karen for spreading pathogens and misinformation - Nurse Karen is thousands of people, and every one of them is plenty good at starting IVs and typing shit into a chart and such. Take them all out of the equation, and every single hospital there is just became short-staffed to the point of complete dysfunction. We need those dumb fucking monkeys to keep putting needles in veins, so we just collectively tolerate all the bullshit that comes with them.

        I hate it.

        • @toynbee
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          54 months ago

          One of the early jobs in my career was providing help desk tech support specifically to a group of nearby hospitals. Prior to that, I thought that - as you said - many or most medical professionals had an above average general intelligence by default. This job killed that theory.

          The most prominent example I can recall is that of spending seventeen minutes on the phone trying to explain where to find a semicolon on the keyboard. Not what a semicolon is or how to use it or its function, just what it looked like and where it was on the keyboard. For seventeen minutes. At the end I think we gave up and found another approach. Obviously - again, as you said - their knowledge is specialized and I couldn’t do their job, but this and many other examples seemed pretty egregious.

          That said, I’ve had a decent number of medical emergencies in my life and, while I’ve found a few doctors and nurses to be personally offensive, they’ve always seemed to do their job very competently and I’ve always, always appreciated them being there. Hopefully that demonstrates that the above example was an outlier.

        • @dustyData
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          44 months ago

          There’s stupid people everywhere. The idea is that we can’t fool proof everything but we can promote change in attitude. There are no infallible people. I’ve met them all, engineers, doctors, politicians, millionaires, everyone has the potential for being utterly stupid at topics they aren’t even aware they are ignorant about.

  • @9point6
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    614 months ago

    Is this something I’m too European to understand?

    • @rockSlayer
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      4 months ago

      Yes. American work culture is bonkers. Most places have a limited number of sick days, if they have health PTO at all. In my experience, if they offer it it’s usually 2 weeks worth, as if people are capable of controlling how often and how long they’re sick for.

      • @[email protected]
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        354 months ago

        Before the Rona times, people would legit flex on how dedicated they were to their jobs that they didn’t see their families as much. That’s not a joke. The work culture in the states has been absolutely toxic for ages. I’m fucking stoked it’s changing.

        • sunzu2
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          34 months ago

          There was a time that in some respects was in fact even more 🤡 than today’s america

      • @[email protected]
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        64 months ago

        I get 10 days a year on a sliding window. So if I call in sick in June, I won’t get that day back until June. It’s bullshit.

    • @[email protected]
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      54 months ago

      I saw a documentary where a German millionnaire was bragging about going to work with 43° flu to make you believe that he worked very hard to get rich.

      • @InternetCitizen2
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        24 months ago

        Only reason to do that is to pass the bug to those who set the bad policy.

  • @apfelwoiSchoppen
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    454 months ago

    From my experience, it is everyone, regardless of age. COVID changed things.

    • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod
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      224 months ago

      I’ve started wearing a mask if I’m feeling sick, which was unthinkable before 2020.

    • @Luvs2Spuj
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      134 months ago

      For some people perhaps. I sadly still go to an office occasionally and I’m astonished that there are people clearly unwell coughing and sneezing all over the place. Last time I went I came back with Covid and was out for nearly a week.

      • @[email protected]
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        74 months ago

        My ex-coworker used to come in obviously sick. “Yeah I’ve got all the NyQuil symptoms.” He would then proceed to cough all over the shared workspace for 4 hours, inevitably coming to the conclusion that he needed to go home. Not coincidentally, this was also about the time that volume picked up and the real work started.

        He also got mad at me once when I didn’t congratulate him for cutting back on smoking after he spent two+ weeks in the hospital for COPD.

        Thankfully we no longer work together anymore. I quit and he died in his 50s.

  • @[email protected]
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    444 months ago

    I really wish companies would realize workers are more productive when they can take time to take care of their mental and physical health.

    Stressed out, overwhelmed, and exhausted people naturally make more mistakes, and mistakes cost money. You’d think they’d understand this because…well… profits?

    But no, a bunch of sociopaths Machiavellianed their way to the top of companies and seem to enjoy making their workers miserable while claiming profits are the motivation for horrible sick leave policies.

    The US is fucking awful about this shit. I really hope it changes soon.

    • @[email protected]
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      154 months ago

      This is why unions are actually helpful to businesses in the long run. Workers see problems that management doesn’t, and then are empowered to make changes.

      The behavior of business owners makes more sense if you think of the goal as power rather than money. Money is often a path to power, but there’s sometimes conflicts between the two. Watch which one they pick and you’ll see what they actually value.

    • haui
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      34 months ago

      I read something yesterday that really disturbed me: there are actually people that worship sociopaths and their manipulative, selfish demeanor as the only true elite. Its disgusting. I feel like this needs to come to the attention of the masses.

    • @[email protected]
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      34 months ago

      Companies don’t even realize that sick people shouldn’t be serving food. I wouldn’t hold my breath (unless you’re eating at a restaurant, where there’s a 50% chance an employee is working while sick).

  • @[email protected]
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    334 months ago

    Still so crazy to me how there are limited “sick days” in the US. You shouldnt need to take limited days off when you are sick. If you are sick you are sick.

    • @[email protected]
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      264 months ago

      They’re limited in number otherwise lots of people would be off work more often. Can’t be having people with long term chronic conditions not working now! Wealth before health!

      In developed countries everyone has access to nearly unlimited, socialised healthcare. And I bet we take less sick days.

  • @[email protected]
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    314 months ago

    Damn you people in the default country are insane.

    I only know the world where everyone takes paid sick days. And usually it’s more like a week.

    Maybe you should rename the community into “Work Reform USA”?

    • @nhhvhy
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      124 months ago

      “Default Country” is my new favorite way to describe the US.

    • @return2ozmaOP
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      104 months ago

      If we’re lucky enough to get vacation days, many of us are encouraged to only take 2 adjacent days to the weekend off. Month long vacations like Europe? Never. 4 days off in a row, normal.

      • @[email protected]
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        4 months ago

        So, should you fight for a work reform, or should you figure out why even your more left leaning party when in power does jack shit about it, and whether it’s really a democracy problem, or a national culture problem, or if maybe your solution is to move to a different democracy where the majority is aligned more with your core beliefs.

        Or maybe I should daily start posting about working conditions in lithium mines in Africa and call for a work reform? Ah, that won’t get upvotes.

  • Cyborganism
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    314 months ago

    Heck, I’m a millenial and I take mental break days when I’m feeling too overwhelmed.

    • macrocarpa
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      204 months ago

      Good. Mental health is health.

    • @[email protected]
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      64 months ago

      I’ve had to do that. Some days I just can’t deal with driving all over the state and dealing with customers

    • @bitchkat
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      34 months ago

      And that is the law in MN. Last year they passed a sick and wellness law that requires sick time and the law stipulates how it can be used. Mental health is one of the options.

  • @[email protected]
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    244 months ago

    My former boss always said, if you’re sick, take a day more off. Would be a problem if half the company got sick.

    It’s in europe tho. Has it swapt over finally?

    • @[email protected]
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      It’s in europe tho.

      Hahaha you had us U.S kids in the first half, not gonna lie. :D

      The newer trend with fancier jobs here is “unlimited paid time off”…Which sounds so amazing!

      How it actually shakes out is there’s no actual number of how much you can take, you’re just guilted and looked at suspiciously and passed over for promotions by using any amount whatsoever.

      I’m sure someone can correct me though because I’ve never had that. My last job gave me a rate of “A week’s shift’s worth of PTO per year.”…I worked 19 hours a week.

      (Also PTO isn’t “sick” days, it’s paid time off…sick and “I’m just not putiup with it today” used up the same resource.)

  • @[email protected]
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    234 months ago

    Company has no loyalty at all to the employee. I could let go every day that I go to work. It’s not a question of if, but when I will be let go. So, as a consequence, I must ask myself the question: After quitting the game, will I regret sacrificing my health for yet another company?

  • @[email protected]
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    214 months ago

    Older coworker here (Xennial). I’ve always used all of my sick days. One job had a week you could carry over to the next year. I held that week if I didn’t need it because next year I’d be making more money. Next job started with sick bank but stripped it away and lumped everything into one PTO bucket that they weren’t legally bound to offer carryover from. Oddly enough, they started having trouble with attendance in November and December as people just took days off whenever. Oh well.

    • @bitchkat
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      114 months ago

      A long time ago at a startup, we had a generous vacation time that had no carry over limit. Most of us didn’t take the full PTO allotment. The morons that the VC people wanted to change the policy to have carry over limits.

      I’d send an email about this time every year to ask if they were going to limit carry over. Because I need to know when in October I have stop working for the year. Most of the founders had similar PTO accrued.

      After about 3 years, they finally did it. I had to take 3 separate 4 week vacations in order to finish the year at my max carry over.

      • @stoly
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        74 months ago

        My father did similar his last year. He basically worked two days a week and took three days vacation for an entire year or so.

    • @Psythik
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      Older Millennial here and because I hang out at websites that Zoomers do, I’ve also started doing this. Y’all have had a major influence on the way I see life, the universe, and everything. I try to keep my sick, PTO, and UPT hours as close to 0 as I can. I call off several times a month and I’ve come into work late every single day for almost a year straight now.

      If you’re going to give me the time, I’m going to use it. Only thing I save up is vacation hours for a yearly trip to wherever.

      • @stoly
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        34 months ago

        In your boat and managed university students. Even millennials are dinosaurs and we all just need to get out of the way.

      • @Serinus
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        34 months ago

        come into work late every single day

        That part is questionable, but if you’re just working 10a - 6p, it’s fine. If you’re making another person cover for you until 9:02, it’s absolutely not fine.

        • sunzu2
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          34 months ago

          That’s a management issue lol

          Look at this wagie discovering solidarity all of a sudden.

        • @[email protected]
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          8-5 with unpaid lunch is normal here. 830-45 is “late” even if you work til 530-45. Just my experience

        • @Psythik
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          14 months ago

          The company has a backup plan for this (they offer extra shifts to cover tardiness/absences and someone always picks them up), not to mention that we’re overstaffed almost every single day; bottom line is that I’m not worried about it. It’s the company’s responsibility to have enough staff on-hand, not mine.

  • @[email protected]
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    174 months ago

    Every single day it seems like there’s an article describing how thing is redefining the workplace.

    • @Donkter
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      44 months ago

      We’re only about 15 years into the online revolution. I say 15 years cause it was about 2010-12 that “normies” (the general population) all got online and got Facebook and Twitter accounts. Historically, these kinds of revolutions take a generation or two to pan out so we’re only in the beginning of redefining life through the lens of the general population being constantly online.

      All these “disruptions” to the workplace and to social engagement will be seen as the writing on the wall retroactively compared to whatever paradigm shift we’re going to see about it in the next 10-20 years.

  • @[email protected]
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    164 months ago

    Between the younger generation and COVID redefining the acceptability of coming to work sick, the workplace does look a lot better.