30 report(s) found.
The graph illustrates the percentage of workers who were absent due to illness for a day or more from five different European countries: the Netherlands, France, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and Germany, over a 20-year period, from 1991 to 2001. Overall, the share of workers from the Netherlands and Sweden showed increasing trends, while the […]
The line graph illustrates the percentage of workers taking a day or more off due to illness in five European countries between 1991 and 2001. Overall, the Netherlands consistently had the highest percentage of illness-related absences, peaking twice during the period. France experienced a steady increase in illness absences over time, while Sweden saw a […]
The line graph illustrates the percentage of workers in five different European countries who had a day or more of illness absence from 1991 to 2001. Overall, the Netherlands consistently had the highest percentage of workers with illness absences, while Germany had the lowest. Over the period, the rates of illness absences generally increased in […]
The line graph below illustrates tha percentage of wokers with illness absence in five European nations during 1991 and 2001. It can be seen that excepting Netherlands, France, and Sweden, all 5 countries’ percentages of worker with illness have not increased or even decreased. In 1991, the percentage of workers with illness absence in Germany […]
The graph provides data on the percentage of workers with illness absences for a day or more across five European countries from 1991 to 2001. The countries included are the Netherlands, Sweden, France, the UK, and Germany. Throughout the period, the Netherlands had the highest percentage of workers absent due to sickness, starting at around […]
The following graph delineates the proportion of employees, who were not presence at work, across five specific nations in Europe because of disease over a 11-year period between 1991 and 2001. In general, it is discernible that all figures saw an upward trajectory, albeit to varying extents, with the exceptions of France and Germany. Notably, […]
The line graph preaents a percentage of employees who are absent for one or more days due to ilnness in 5 European countries that happened between 1991 and 2001 Overall, the proportion of sick days in Netherlands keep higher than in any other countries. On the other hand, France showed declining trend, while Sweden showed […]
The line gragh illustrates the persentage of employees being absent from work for a day or more due to ilness in 1991 to 2001. Overall, the proportion of sick days in Netherlands keep hidger than any other countries. On the other hand, France showed a declining trend while Sweden showed an increasing tendency. The proportion […]
The line graph shows the proportion of employees in five European nations who took a day or more off due to illness between 1991 and 2001. Overall, despite significant changes, the proportion of sick days taken by Dutch workers remains higher than in any other country. On the other hand, France showed a declining tendency, […]
The line graph illustrates the percentage of who are didn’t working due to their illness absence in 5 different parts of the world namely in Netherlands,Sweden,France,UK and Germany in years between 1991 and 2001. Overall,it is clear that the majority of workers with illness absence is in Netherlands,while reverse is true for Germany in given […]
The presented line chart delineates the fluctuating rates of employees taking sick leave across several European nations from 1991 to 2001. Overall, variations in sickness absence rates are evident in different countries. The Netherlands consistently registered the highest rate of individuals taking sick leave from work, whereas Germany reported the lowest rate among all years […]
The line graph compares 5 different countries in Europe in terms of the percentage of workers who were absent from their workplace due to illness between 1991 and 2001 years. Overall, despite being at second place initially, the most workers in Netherlands did not go to their work because of their illness throughout the period, […]
The line graph provides information on the proportion of employees being absent from work for at least a day due to illness between 1991 and 2001. The Netherlands and Sweden commenced the period with an identical proportion of 5%. After a slight rise by 1% in the following year, the figure for the former dropped […]
The given line chart illustrates how many people were absent from work due to illness in five European countries namely France, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden and the UK from 1991 to 2001. Overall, there was an upward trend in the number of employees with sickness absence in the UK, the Netherlands and Sweden; while the […]
The provided lines chart delineates the proportion of workers who were absent due to illness for a day or more in five European nations during the period from 1991 to 2001. Overall, the absenteeism rates in the Netherlands, Sweden, and the UK showed an upward trajectory, while France and Germany experienced a decline in the […]
The given lines chart illustrates the proportion of workers that were absent for one day or more because of sickness in five European countries between 1991 and 2001. Overall, it is clear that the quantity of workers absent in Netherlands, Sweden and the UK witnessed an upward trend, while the opposite figure was true for […]
The line chart illustrates the number of workers absent due to illness in different countries, namely the Netherlands, France, Sweden, the UK, and Germany, from 1991 to 2001. Overall, there were fluctuations in the rate of workers taking leave from work due to illness in all countries examined. Notably, the figures for the Netherlands were […]
The line graph provides information about the amount of employees from five different European nations who avoided work for one or more days between 1991 and 2001 because of sickness. Overall, Germany has had the lowest and most stable trend in worker absences over the last 10 years, whereas the Netherlands has the highest rate. […]
The line chart illustrates the proportion of employees in 5 distinct countries in Europe who took a sick leave from 1991 to 2001 Overall, there was a significant decrease in the percentage of workers absent due to sickness in France over the period while the figure for Sweden observed an upward trend. Those recorded in […]
The line graph gives information about absence at work because of an illness in 5 different counties in Europe between 1991 and 2001. Overall, it’s clear that the Netherlands and France was the only countries which showed an increase. While , figure decreased in Sweden. Other 2 countries UK and Germany maintain the same level […]
The line graph gives the information over workers who decline working because of illness for one day or more in five different countries over a period of eleven years. Overall, it’s evident that UK and Germany remained steadily unchanged whereas other countries saw significant increases and decreases over a given period. First half of the […]
The given line graph outlines the proportion of employees who missed work for one or more days due to health reasons in five distinct European nations over the period of one decade, spanning at 1991. Overall, what stands out from the graph is that while the figures for Netherlands, Sweden, and UK witnessed an upward […]
The line graph provides information about the rates of employees in five different countries located in Europe who were sick and unable to work for a day or more over a period between 1991 and 2001. The data is calibrated in percentages. Overall, the highest rate of the employee absence belong to the Netherlands, while […]
The line graph provides information about the rates of employees in five various European countries that were ill and not able to work for a day or more over a period between 1991 and 2001. The data is calibrated in percentages. Overall, the Netherlands has the highest rate of employee absence, while Germany has had […]
The line graph provides information about the rates of employees in five various European countries that were ill and not able to work for a day or more over a period between 1991 and 2001. The data is calibrated in percentage. Overall, the highest rate of employee absence belong to Netherlands, while Germany had the […]
The line graph illustrates the proportions of employees who took sick leave in five different countries from 1991 to 2001. Overall, the data for the Netherlands showed mild changes, while the figures for Sweden and France were stark differences compared to those for the UK and Germany. Even though having experienced a subtle fluctuation, the […]
The line graph shows quantity of workers of Netherlands, France, Sweden, UK, Germany with illness Absence from 1991 to 2001 years. The Germany and UK workers was remain stable for whole period for about 1.5 and 2.5 percent each. Netherlands workers were 4.8 percent in 1991 and increased to 5.5. Then this value was decreased […]
The given graph illustrates the percentage of workmen who were absent for more than a day because of illness in 5 different nations in 10 years starting from 1991. Overall, it is obvious that the Netherlands accounted for the highest rate of ill employees being absent, while the figure for Germany stood last. There was […]
The graph illustrates the changes in the proportion of employees who were absent at least one day because of sickness from five various European nations during a decade from 1991. Overall, what stands out from the graph is that there were substantial changes in all the countries, with the exception of the percentage of Germany […]
The line graph illustrates how many employees from five distinct European nations were off from work due to ailment for a day or above between 1991 and 2001. Overall, the number of illness absence workers in the Netherlands, Sweden, and the UK witnessed an upward trend with those in Sweden rocketing. In addition, the Netherlands’ […]
