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AbsenceFit for WorkFit notesSickness absence

Almost half of employers think fit notes are ineffective

by Jo Faragher 21 Jul 2015
by Jo Faragher 21 Jul 2015 Doctors need to work more closely with employers, the EEF claims.
Doctors need to work more closely with employers, the EEF claims.

Almost half of employers believe the Department of Health’s flagship fit note scheme is not helping employees return to work.

A survey by manufacturers’ organisation the EEF, in conjunction with Jelf Employee Benefits, showed that 43% of employers did not think fit notes were helpful in getting ill staff back to work. This is an increase from 35% in 2010, when the scheme was introduced.

Fit note resources

How to use fit notes effectively

The survey also found that insufficient training on the use of fit notes for GPs and other medical professionals, as well as a lack of collaboration with employers, was hampering them being used effectively.

According to the EEF, only one GP in eight has been trained in workplace health and only a small sum has been spent on GP training.

Almost half (47%) of respondents believed that the advice given by GPs on employees’ fitness for work in 2014 had deteriorated, and only 17% felt it had got better.

Just 22% of those surveyed said fit notes had helped to facilitate earlier returns to work.

The EEF now wants the Government to set a fixed date by which all GPs and medical practitioners should be trained in the use of fit notes.

There was, however, a small reduction in the number of companies that received “may be fit for work” communications from GPs. Just over a quarter of companies reported that they did not receive any “may be fit for work” fit notes in 2014, compared with 35% in 2010.

If someone is deemed “may be fit for work”, as opposed to “fit for work”, the employer should make reasonable adjustments to help them back into their role. More than two-fifths were able to make the required adjustments, the EEF found.

The EEF’s head of health and safety, Terry Woolmer, said: “We have supported the ‘fit note’ since day one and wanted it to succeed.

“However, the evidence is now clear, five years on, that it’s not delivering on helping people back to work earlier. In fact, the evidence suggests that the quality of advice being given by GPs to help people back to work is deteriorating.

“It can still be made to work, but Government now needs to put its shoulder to the wheel with greater resources.”

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The EEF also made a number of key recommendations to improve the use of fit notes. These include:

  • linking evidence of fit note training to doctors’ appraisal systems;
  • creating “e-communities” to allow more effective interaction and communication between GPs and employers/employer occupational health services in the fit note process;
  • providing targeted advice for SMEs;
  • training line managers to become more aware of the fit note process;
  • modifying the “fit note” to include a referral to the Fit for Work Service; and
  • producing clear guidance to show the interaction between the Fit for Work Service and the fit note.

The survey also asked whether or not employers had a specific absence target – and almost two-thirds of respondent companies did, but only 55% had reached it.

Jo Faragher

Jo Faragher has been an employment and business journalist for 20 years. She regularly contributes to Personnel Today and writes features for a number of national business and membership magazines. Jo is also the author of 'Good Work, Great Technology', published in 2022 by Clink Street Publishing, charting the relationship between effective workplace technology and productive and happy employees. She won the Willis Towers Watson HR journalist of the year award in 2015 and has been highly commended twice.

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