Domestic Violence & the Workplace
Domestic violence doesn't just affect women at home.
It affects them in the workplace, compromising their safety and the safety of their fellow workers, their performance and productivity.
Companies like Verizon, Blue Shield, Avon, and Liz Claiborne understand the devastating and widespread impact of domestic violence and their generous donations are helping to make our workplaces safer, more productive, and more profitable.
Negative Effects of Domestic Violence and the Workplace
Domestic violence affects productivity and increases absenteeism:
24% of women between the ages of 18 and 65 have experienced domestic violence (EDK Associates, The Many Faces of Domestic Violence and its Impact on the Workplace, 1997).
74% of employed battered women were harassed by their partner while at work. This caused 56% of them to be late for work at least five times a month, 28% to leave early at least five days a month, and 54% to miss at least three full days of work a month.
The total health care costs of family violence are estimated in the hundreds of millions each year, much of which is paid for by the employer. 44% of executives surveyed say that that domestic violence increases their health care costs (Pennsylvania Blue Shield Institute, Social Problems and Rising Health Care Costs in Pennsylvania, pp. 3-5, 1992).
47% of senior executives polled said that domestic violence has a harmful effect on the company’s productivity (Roper Starch Worldwide Study for Liz Claiborne, Inc., 1994).
71% of EAP providers surveyed have dealt with an employee being stalked at work by a current of former partner, and 83% have assisted an employee with a restraining order.
78% of Human Resources professionals polled by Personnel Journal said that domestic violence is a workplace issue (April, 1995, page 65).
94% of Corporate Security Directors surveyed rank domestic violence as a high security problem at their company. National Safe Workplace Institute survey, as cited in “Talking Frankly About Domestic Violence,” Personnel Journal, April, 1995, page 64).
Batterers also may be less productive or miss work because of violence, incarceration, or legal proceedings resulting from the violence. Results of a survey on the impact of domestic violence offenders on workplace safety and health revealed that perpetrators negatively affect workplace safety, productivity and are responsible for lost time:
78% use workplace resources at least once to express remorse or anger to, check up on, or threaten the victim.
74% has easy access to their intimate partner’s workplace, with 21% reporting that they contacted her at the workplace in violation of a no-contact order.
48% reported difficulty concentrating at work, with 19% reporting a workplace accident or near miss
42% of offenders were late for work.
Nearly one-third of American women report being physically or sexually abused by a husband or boyfriend at some point in their lives, according to a survey, The Commonwealth Fund, Health Concerns Across a Woman’s Lifespan: 1998 Survey of Women’s Health, May 1999.
Every day, on average, more than three women are murdered by their husbands or boyfriends in this country.
In a company that is mid-to large-sized, it is a certainty that employees are personally affected by domestic violence.
WHY IS DOMESTIC ABUSE A WORKPLACE ISSUE?
Domestic violence often becomes workplace violence. It isn’t a “private matter” that stays in the home when its victims go to work. The lethality of domestic violence often increases at times when the batterer believes that the victim has left the relationship. Once a woman attempts to leave an abusive partner, the workplace can become the only place the assailant can locate and harm her. Or the effects of abuse can spill over into the workplace when the victim is harassed by threatening phone calls, absent because of injuries or less productive from extreme stress.
Employers know that personal, “real life” problems affect job performance, and that job performance affects the bottom line. Most employers now routinely offer employees a full spectrum of assistance programs to help them deal with issues such as drug addiction, depression and other personal and/or family problems. Employers long ago found that doing so is ultimately more cost-effective than leaving employees to solve these problems on their own.
57% percent of senior corporate executives believe domestic violence is a major problem in society. One-third of them thought this problem has a negative impact on their bottom lines, and 40% said they were personally aware of employees and other individuals affected by domestic violence. 66% believe their company’s financial performance would benefit from addressing the issue of domestic violence among their employees (Roper Starch Worldwide Study for Liz Claiborne, Inc., 1994).
Business should respond to domestic violence for its own self-interest and do so in a businesslike way. By working to mitigate the economic, legal and productivity risks related to domestic violence, an employer will also create a workplace that is safer for victims and will send a powerful message to their local community that responding to domestic violence is “good business.”
Domestic violence is a serious, recognizable, and preventable problem like thousands of other workplace health and safety issues that affect a business and its bottom line.
Want to raise awareness within your team? Click here for information about corporate partnerships with WomenSV.