Canadian HR Reporter

October 2021 CAN

Canadian HR Reporter is the national journal of human resource management. It features the latest workplace news, HR best practices, employment law commentary and tools and tips for employers to get the most out of their workforce.

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More than three-quarters of U.S. organizations have more employees who feel burned out since the start of the pandemic, a survey has found. Nearly six in 10 of those organizations report that their employees work more hours since April 2020, revealed the survey of 231 human capital executives of mostly large organizations — 82 per cent with more than 1,000 employees — by the Conference Board. In addition, three in 10 respondents say that the number of employee sick days has increased and nearly as many say that employee engagement and morale have decreased. More than one-half of executives say that work-life balance has decreased for their staff. The area that is least likely to have seen any change, for better or for worse during the pandemic, is the number of safety issues, with 70 per cent of executives saying they have stayed the same. However, it hasn't been all bad news for the bottom line of these organizations, as the majority say that the productivity of their employees has improved either moderately or substantially. Nearly seven out of 10 working mothers in the U.S. plan to stay at home full-time to look after their children rather than return to work within the next 12 months, a survey has found. The pandemic negatively affected the careers of more than half of respondents, with 24 per cent having stopped working since it began and another 34 per cent having to reduce their hours, found the survey of 1,508 women who identified as primary caregivers to children under the age of 18 by TopResume, a resumé-writing service, one year after the start of the pandemic. More than half (55 per cent) of respondents say they would voluntarily leave their Shared tears in the workplace of healthcare workers of travel and tourism workers of education workers MOTHERS PUT CAREERS ON HOLD One in six employees have cried with a colleague at work during the pandemic, according to a study. The past year has been particularly tough on the healthcare, travel and tourism, and education sectors, according to Microsoft's Work Trend Index, which surveyed 31,092 full-time workers across 31 international markets. U.S. SEES RISES IN BURNOUT AND PRODUCTIVITY jobs if given the option. Seventy per cent of respondents who stopped working did so in order to accommodate their children, while out of the 30 per cent who lost their jobs, more than half (16 per cent) decided to put their careers on hold. "The pandemic continues to wreak havoc on people's careers, but no one has been hit harder than working mothers, which is especially distressing since over a year has passed and the outlook should be more promising," says TopResume career expert Amanda Augustine. 23% 21% 20% PRODUCTIVITY GAINS IN PANDEMIC CRYING COMMON IN HARD-HIT SECTORS 59% 10% 31% Increased No change Decreased www.hrreporter.com 15

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