According to the Center for Disease Control, the health-related costs of rape, physical assault, stalking, and homicide  by intimate partners  exceed $5.8 billion each year. Of this total, nearly $4.1 billion  are for direct medical  and  mental health care services.

Productivity losses  account for nearly  $1.8 billion  and victims  of severe domestic violence  lose nearly 8 million days of paid work yearly.

This represents  a huge cost  to industry. Co-workers of victims  are also affected  in terms  of their own productivity  or due to safety issues.

A report by Kaiser Permanente  found that two-thirds of employees  have had  at least one encounter  with domestic violence  in the workplace  in their career  and many report  that a co-worker’s  domestic violence victimization  directly involved them  with the perpetrator  and/or contributed  to fear for their own safety. I know this is true. When I left my ex-husband he not only harassed me at work but also intimated my co-workers by calling them and telling them he was going to kill me and  them too!

Many companies  know that domestic violence  hurts their employees  and their communities. They’re aggressively  reaching out  to their female employees  in need.  A growing group of CEOs  is saying  that it's time  for Corporate America  to confront the issue  head-on  and I agree.

Tune in tomorrow as I will talk about a solution to addressing domestic violence in the workplace which helps both  the victim and their co-workers.