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Calling in sick

IN RESPONSE to the swine flu, President Obama has been urging people to take the same steps as they would to prevent a regular flu: wash hands frequently; cover their mouths, and stay home from work if they are sick.

IN RESPONSE to the swine flu, President Obama has been urging people to take the same steps as they would to prevent a regular flu: wash hands frequently; cover their mouths, and stay home from work if they are sick.

It's too bad that 57 million workers will have a hard time with that last one. That's the number of workers who don't have any paid sick days, according to the workplace organization 9 to 5. For those workers, taking a day off to keep from infecting co-workers and customers means losing income, or even their jobs.

What's a bigger shame - for the rest of us - is that most of the workers without paid sick time are employed in lower-wages jobs that come with wide public exposure: restaurant workers, child-care centers, nursing homes, mass-transit systems, schools and hotels.

The reality of such a disease, and the policy of allowing a systemically broken health-care system to continue couldn't be on a more dangerous collision course. Workplace issues, such as those addressed by the Healthy Families Act, which allow workers paid sick time, is another long-abandoned area that needs attention. Let's hope there's time to fix both. *