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The data now supports what many of us in employment law have been seeing in real time – a shift from taking actual sick leave to “working from home” when feeling poorly.
CIPD’s Health & Wellbeing at Work report (2024/2025) notes that in organisations with home working:
In the private sector, particularly in technology, science, engineering and research, this trend is even more pronounced because work is portable. A developer can commit code from bed. A data scientist can push models from the sofa. A lab supervisor can clear inboxes from their phone.
The effect is what researchers call “virtual presenteeism” — showing up, just remotely.
ONS labour data shows sickness absence rates falling again in 2024, but that dataset only captures absence, not people working through illness. On the surface, that looks good but under the surface, there is at least the possibility that people are trading short-term availability for long-term performance.
For high-growth STEM organisations, productivity is everything. Lead time to product launch, customer implementation, clinical validation or funding milestones often depends on a small number of highly skilled individuals.
Deloitte’s Mental Health and Employers analysis (2024) estimates the UK annual cost of poor mental health at work at £51 billion, with almost half (£24 billion) attributable not to absence, but to people working while unwell.
The Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) recently estimated employees lose around 44 productive days a year due to working while ill — compared to 6–7 days lost through sickness absence.
STEM organisations have characteristics that unintentionally increase the risk:
| STEM factor | How it fuels quiet illness |
| High autonomy / remote-first culture
|
Work can be done from anywhere — so people work while unwell. |
| Lean teams and “critical knowledge holders”
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Individuals feel they can’t switch off without causing delay. |
| Fixed project deadlines (funding rounds, sprints, regulatory submissions) | People carry on rather than create “blockers”. |
| Cultural norm of “smart, resilient high performers” | There is prestige in always being available. |
If your business relies on key-person dependency, then presenteeism is not a wellbeing issue – it’s a single point of failure risk.
From a legal perspective, businesses should remember:
In other words, allowing or encouraging employees to push through illness may not be the best way to manage your workforce in the long run.
The most effective businesses — and I see this in my own client base — do three things:
If you want to update your hybrid working or sickness absence policies to align your company with best practice, please get in touch.
Dawn Robertson, Partner & Accredited Specialist in Employment Law, BTO Solicitors LLP: dro@bto.co.uk / 0131 0131 222 3242
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