Nearly one in five domestic workers were unable to work due to illness in 2023

Nearly one in five domestic workers were unable to work due to illness in 2023
Credit: Belga

Almost one in five domestic workers were unable to work due to illness in 2023 according to data collected by HR provider Securex and revealed in a report by Gazet Van Antwerpen.

An analysis of data from 81 service voucher companies employing 7,087 individuals showed an average sickness absence rate of 20.18% among domestic workers – more than double the average for other sectors, which stands at 8.21%.

Additionally, Securex flagged a new high in employees off sick for over a year, which accounted for 10.03% of the individuals in the study. “The number of long-term sick in the service voucher sector has risen by 375% since 2012, compared to just 75% across all sectors,” said Steven De Vliegher, a spokesperson for Securex.

XLG Home, the sector’s primary employer in Wallonia and Brussels with nearly 4,000 domestic workers, recently announced an absence rate of around 33%. “This rate has doubled in five years,” shared XLG Home spokesperson, Jerome Paquot.

Trade unions attribute these absences to challenging working conditions and inappropriate equipment. A 2020 study conducted by the Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB), highlighted by union organisations, found that those working in service voucher roles were 85% more likely to be unable to work and 260% more likely to be on long-term disability within five years of starting in the sector.

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