Long Working Hours 'Health Risk'
Working long hours can greatly increase the
risk of suffering injury or illness, a study says.
Workers who do overtime were 61% more likely
to become hurt or ill, once factors such as age and gender were
taken into account.
And working more than 12 hours a day raised the
risk by more than a third, the University of Massachusetts found.
A 60-hour week carried a 23% greater risk, the
study of US records from 110,236 employment periods found.
The study looked at data from 1987 to 2000. An
employment period relates to the time a person spent at one firm.
Counting this way meant some individuals might have been covered
by the research more than once.
Report co-author Allard Dembe said risk was not
necessarily associated with how hazardous the job was.
"The results of this study suggest that jobs
with long working hours are not more risky merely because they
are concentrated in inherently hazardous industries or occupations.
"Our findings are consistent with the hypothesis
that long working hours indirectly precipitate workplace accidents
through a causal process, for instance, by inducing fatigue or
stress in affected workers."
And he said the findings, published in the Occupational
and Environmental Health journal, supported initiative such as
the 48-hour European Working Time Directive to cut the number
of working hours.
From the records, researchers found 5,139 work-related
injuries and illnesses, ranging from stress to cuts, burns and
muscle injuries.
Overtime risk
More than half of these injuries and illnesses
occurred in jobs with extended working hours or overtime.
The researchers concluded that the more hours
worked, the greater the risk of injury.
But they did not find that lengthy commutes to
and from work had any impact on illness and injury.
In the UK 14% of the working population - 3.6m
- work more than 48 hours a week.
Paul Sellers, a policy adviser at the Trade Union
Congress, said the findings were unsurprising.
"It is clear that working long hours is not good
for you. And what is important to realise that it is not fair
on other people.
"If you are involved in an accident whether at
work or because you are tired from work it can involve other people.
"In the UK the situation is gradually getting
better, but employers need to realise it is in their interests
not to push people into working long hours.
"Often it is the case of a workplace not being
organised properly that people work long hours."
More on Worksite
Wellness
Reference
Source 108
August
19, 2005
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