The U.S. is one of very few countries in the world that doesn't mandate paid sick leave, and that means coronavirus is likely to spread faster here.
, experts are looking at how that lack of sick leave is likely to help the virus spread in the U.S., much faster than it would if people were able to stay home when sick.
Around 25 percent of U.S. workers have no paid sick leave. Many of them are in lower paying jobs, which means that when they’re sick, they can’t afford to take unpaid time off. That setunds them trudging into work even when they’re ill, and considering many of those workers are in industries that put them in contact withof people, like fast food workers and taxi drivers, this can contribute majorly to the spread of sickness.
To see how the lack of mandated paid leave in the U.S. might affect the spread of the coronavirus, theanalyzed a 2017 study on the spread of the flu in places where sick leave was mandated versus in places where it wasn’t. Researchers compared San Francisco, Washington, Seattle, and New York, all places that have passed their own laws guaranteeing sick leave to workers, to cities where workers have no such guarantee.
What researchers found was shocking. In cities where paid leave policies were put in place, flu-related searches dropped immediately, sometimes by as much as 50 percent compared to cities where workers had no guarantee of paid sick leave. At the end of the first year after sick leave policies began, searches were down an average of 40 percent in those cities versus cities with no sick leave laws.
As the coronavirus reaches more and more people , the best way to control it is good public health policy, which means basics like washing your hands, avoiding crowded places, and staying away from other people if you’re sick. But in the U.S., when so many people can’t afford to stay home even when they have fevers and other symptoms, that just isn’t possible. How that will affect the continued spread of the coronavirus remains to be seen.
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