social discipline

Doug Henwood dhenwood at panix.com
Tue Dec 22 07:36:17 PST 1998


The more paranoid among us have long thought that the anti-smoking campaign was part of a broad campaign of intensified social discipline, along with the drug war. Two items from today's Wall Street Journal confirm this. First, a short from the front page:

<quote> EMPLOYERS GO BEYOND background checks and test employee attitudes.

Employers long used honesty tests to screen new hires, but many now want to find out potential employees' attitudes toward drug use, workplace violence and sexual harassment. Industrial psychologist Kurt Helm, who designs such tests, says traditional background checks only show whether a potential employee has a history of past abuses, and not future tendencies. "It just says they haven't been caught yet," he says.

BTi Employee Screening Services Inc., Dallas, which provides background-checking services for other firms, uses an attitudes survey on its own hires. "You like to know what people are thinking. You don't want to hire your problems," says John Pate, vice president of operations. </quote>

You like to know not only what they're doing, but what they're thinking! And the innocent are just those who haven't been caught yet.

And the other item is an article on the $27 billion threat of casual drinking!

<quote> Casual Drinkers Are Seen As Big Productivity Problem

By RON WINSLOW Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Health researchers say they have uncovered a hidden source of productivity problems for American corporations: casual drinkers.

A survey of 14,000 employees at seven major U.S. companies found that workers who aren't considered problem drinkers cause, in aggregate, far more incidents of absenteeism, tardiness and poor quality of work than those regarded as alcohol-dependent. The findings suggest that seemingly innocuous events such as an after-work trip to the bar or a family birthday party can add up to a significant drag on productivity.

"This research is a wake-up call," says Bruce Davidson, manager of employee assistance and work-life programs at Compaq Computer Corp.'s Digital Equipment Corp. unit, which wasn't a participant in the study. He notes that while employers have made significant investments to deal with workers with chronic alcohol problems, they have paid scant attention to the potential impact of alcohol use among a much broader segment of the work force.

The $2 million report, known as the Worksite Alcohol Study, was sponsored by the National Institute for Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse, part of the National Institutes of Health; and by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, a Princeton, N.J., health-care philanthropy. The seven participating companies -- all of whom insisted on anonymity -- included an insurer, an oil company, a utility, a paper manufacturer, a building-materials concern and two conglomerates.

Big Price Tag The NIAAA estimates that alcohol problems cost U.S. employers $27 billion a year in productivity alone, a bill attributed largely to alcohol-dependent workers. But hardly anyone has considered the possibility that an occasional hangover after a party or a little too much wine at lunch among a much broader segment of the work force might add up to a significant adverse effect on corporate performance.

Thomas W. Mangione, director of the study, likened the results to similar findings during the past decade that casual drinkers, not alcoholics, cause the lion's share of drunk-driving-related accidents and fatalities. Dr. Mangione is a senior research scientist at JSI Research & Training Institute Inc., a nonprofit organization in Boston that specializes in health issues.

"It's subtle," he says. "It is individual people who don't do this very often, but because there are so many ... in aggregate it totals up to a very big problem."

Dr. Mangione and his colleagues didn't set out to look at productivity issues among casual drinkers. Instead, they conducted a broad assessment of alcohol use and the workplace through surveys, interviews and focus groups conducted at several sites at each of the participating companies.

They found that people considered occasional drinkers, in total, cause nearly 29% more incidents such as absenteeism, tardiness, less than acceptable work or arguments with colleagues than workers who said they didn't drink at all.

Workers with alcohol problems cause 28% more such incidents than casual drinkers but, in total, just 41% of total alcohol-related productivity problems, compared with 59% for the occasional drinkers. In addition, in what the researchers say is contrary to conventional wisdom, researchers found that nearly one-quarter of managers and executives drink some alcohol during the workday, compared with 8% of hourly workers.

The finding of moderate workday alcohol consumption among managers comes even as once-common three-martini lunches have largely disappeared and as many companies have cut back on open-bar holiday parties. But top management's tolerance of alcohol use may be a barrier to addressing its occasional misuse in the broader population, experts say.

David C. Deubner, vice president, occupational medicine, at Brush Wellman Inc., a Cleveland manufacturer of beryllium products, says the findings help him understand why he finds people at higher levels of management less concerned about the problem than plant managers and workers.

Dr. Deubner, who was instrumental in developing strong workplace alcohol policies at Conrail Inc., the Philadelphia rail company, says he plans to use the data to spur top management at his company to pay more attention to the issue. But he also concedes that it isn't clear what effective remedies are available.

'Quite Effective' "We have worked out procedures that are quite effective in working with the addict," he says. "If we decide that 50% to 60% of our productivity impact is due to an additional 60% of the work force that we haven't dealt with, do we have technologies to deal with that?"

The alcohol study's findings come at a time when global competitiveness, a tight labor market, and robust stock market valuations are putting ever-increasing pressure on companies to squeeze every ounce of productivity out of their employees.

At the same time, a resurgence of health-care costs is focusing renewed attention on the impact that personal behavior can have on both medical expenses and job performance. But Dr. Mangione counsels that companies shouldn't take the study's data as a mandate to delve into the private lives of generally productive employees.

Rather, he and his colleagues call for employee-awareness campaigns and other similar public-health efforts. They also recommend that employers examine their overall attitudes toward alcohol and how this part of the corporate culture may influence the behavior of their workers.

John Saylor, manager of employee assistance programs for AMR Corp., Fort Worth, Texas, which wasn't a participant in the study, says one important finding offers guidance to employers seeking to address the issue. The productivity problems were most apparent at some individual sites at each of the participating companies, he said, indicating a local culture within a company that encourages misuse of alcohol.

"That says there is something you can target," Mr. Saylor says. Susan Martin, program director for work-site alcohol problems at NIAAA, says: "Work cultures vary widely, and there are informal norms of do's and don'ts of drinking that contribute to wide variation." She adds: "Companies often don't enforce their own policies, and that contributes to the problem." </quote>



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