Affiliation:
1. Mitsui Chemicals, Inc. Health Care Section, , Tokyo , Japan
2. University of Occupational and Environmental Health, Japan Department of Mental Health, Institute of Industrial Ecological Sciences, , Kitakyushu, Fukuoka , Japan
Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
Although vaccines have promoted the socioeconomic normalization of COVID-19, adverse effects on work performance due to the post-vaccination side effects have been reported. Thus, we examined the relationship between the status of going to work the day following vaccination as a post-vaccination employment consideration and work performance among Japanese workers in the manufacturing industry.
Methods
Overall, 1273 employees who received the COVID-19 vaccine in a Japanese manufacturing district were surveyed using a self-administered web-based questionnaire that included fever, fatigue, workplace attendance the day after vaccination, work performance 1 week after vaccination, and demographic and occupational characteristics (age, gender, work style, and psychological distress [K6 scale]). The effects of fatigue and attendance on declining work performance were estimated using a linear mixed model, with individuals as random effects and the rest as fixed effects.
Results
After adjusting for demographic and occupational characteristics, the third-order interaction of fever, fatigue, and attendance on the day following vaccination was significant. The nonattendance group had a significantly higher work performance than the attendance group in those without fever and long-term fatigue (F1,1559 = 4.9, P = .026) and with fever and short-term fatigue (F1,1559 = 5.9, P = .015). Fever and workplace attendance the following day were not directly related to a decrease in work performance after vaccination.
Conclusions
Our findings suggest that nonattendance at the workplace is associated with work performance due to the side effects after COVID-19 vaccination.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
1 articles.
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