“I probably shouldn’t go in today”: Inequitable access to paid sick leave and its impacts on health behaviors during the emergence of COVID-19 in the Seattle area

Author:

Iwu Chidozie D.ORCID,Cox Sarah N.,Sohlberg Sarah L.,Kim Ashley E.,Logue Jennifer,Han Peter D.,Sibley Thomas R.,Ilcisin Misja,Fay Kairsten A.,Lee Jover,McCulloch Denise J.,Wang YongzheORCID,Boeckh Michael,Englund Janet A.,Starita Lea M.,Hajat Anjum,Chu Helen Y.

Abstract

This study examines inequities in access to paid sick leave (PSL) by race/ethnicity, income, and sex and the role of PSL access on leave-taking and care-seeking behaviors among Seattle-area workers in the months leading up to and during the emergence of COVID-19 in the region. Survey responses were collected online and in-person from individuals experiencing acute respiratory illness symptoms between November 2019 and March 2020 as part of a community-based respiratory viral surveillance study. Chi-square tests and log-binomial models were used to assess the association between PSL access and various socioeconomic indicators. A total of 66.6% (n = 2,276) respondents reported access to PSL. Proportionally, access to PSL was highest in respondents identifying as Asian (70.5%), followed by White (68.7%), Latine (58.4%), Multiracial (57.1%), Black (47.1%), and Other (43.1%). Access to PSL increased with household income. Eighty three percent of high-income respondents reported access compared to 52.9% of low-income households. Only 23.3% of the lowest-income households reported access to PSL. Fewer females (65.2%) than males (70.7%) reported access to PSL. Access to PSL is inequitably distributed across income, race/ethnicity, and sex. This study reinforces the vast body of knowledge on how socioeconomic inequalities increase individual and community-level vulnerability to the impacts of infectious disease outbreaks. It also supports the role of labor and economic policy in mitigating (or exacerbating) these impacts. Exemplified by the COVID-19 pandemic, universal access to PSL, especially for marginalized populations, benefits all.

Funder

Gates Ventures

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

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