There is much more to life than work. We all have families, friends, and a beautiful world to enjoy. We need more time off to enjoy it.

  • renrenPDX@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    Yeah my German friend tells me of his coworker that he hasn’t seen since early this year, out sick. Can’t be fired, and no replacement. Or take a week off and be sick the following week. It’s not without its drawbacks but significantly better than what we have here.

    Here, we tend to be afraid to take sick days.

    • Kage520@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      I’ve been with the same company almost 20 years, and I’m that time have taken so little time off, I have accumulated 75 days. But I just had a child a couple years ago, and this year I took 8 days off throughout the year, since she brought home so many sicknesses. One of those required 3 days off, and I actually got a doctor’s note because it was 3 consecutive days and that’s the policy.

      It still came up in my review. I basically got a “barely passing” score with “needs to be more reliable”.

    • Damage@feddit.it
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      4 days ago

      Idk how it works in Germany, but here only the first 3 days of sick leave are paid by the employer, after that it’s the national welfare agency that pays.

      • Therobohour@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Three days? Its pretty hard to recover from a broken back in three days. Or childbirth. Or the flu for that mattet

        • Damage@feddit.it
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          24 hours ago

          You misunderstand, you take as many as you need (there’s a limit in theory but that’s… Complicated), it’s just that after 3 days you are paid by the welfare agency, not your employer. For you it’s the same, you still get your usual paycheck and your employer wires you the money, but they are reimbursed.

          It’s an answer to the frequent criticism “but if you stay in sick leave for a long time it’s damaging to your employer!”

      • NokogiriSama@piefed.social
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        4 days ago

        You get 6 weeks full pay from your employer and after that you get 70% pay from your health insurance for up to 72 weeks.