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Long work hours may raise injury
risk
New York -
Working beyond the standard 8-hour day may raise the risk of
job-related injuries, regardless of a person's occupation, a new study
suggests.
Among nearly 10,800 U.S. adults
followed for 13 years, researchers found that those who worked
overtime or on regularly extended shifts were at greater risk of
on-the-job injuries. And the effect was not limited to hazard-fraught
industries.
Muscle and joint problems were the
most common complaint, followed by cuts and bruises, according to
findings published in the journal Occupational and Environmental
Medicine.
Some past research has shown that
people who work long hours tend to sustain more injuries and health
problems than workers with standard 40-hour weeks. But these studies
have often been limited by shortcomings in their methodology,
according to Dr. Allard Dembe, the lead author of the new study.
A central question has been whether
the findings reflect the fact that overtime and long work days are
often found in inherently dangerous industries, like manufacturing,
construction and trucking.
But in their study, Dembe and his
colleagues found that longer work hours appeared to raise injury risk
even when job type and other factors -- such as a worker's age and
gender -- were weighed.
This strengthens the argument that
something about long work hours themselves makes people more
vulnerable to injury, said Dembe, an associate professor at the
University of Massachusetts Medical School in Shrewsbury.
That something, he told Reuters
Health, could be stress and fatigue, which can make workers more prone
to mistakes and mishaps.
The study findings are based on data
from a U.S. survey that has followed the same group of people since
1979. The researchers analyzed data collected from 10,793 participants
between 1987 and 2000, starting when the men and women were between
the ages of 22 and 30.
Workers were considered to have
logged long hours if their jobs sometimes included overtime -- meaning
beyond the usual 40-hour week -- or if they regularly worked 12-hour
days or 60-hour weeks.
Overall, there were more than 5,100
work-related injuries or health problems during the study period, with
more than half occurring in jobs with long hours.
People who normally worked long
shifts were 37 percent more likely to sustain an injury than their
peers who worked shorter hours. Those who worked overtime were at 61
percent greater risk than workers whose jobs included no overtime.
The fact that overtime seemed to be a
greater injury risk than regularly extended shifts is one of the most
interesting findings from the study, Dembe said.
He suspects that periodically working
overtime may set people up for more injuries because they're not used
to the schedule.
"It's something that's not routine.
It's over and above what you usually do," Dembe noted.
He also pointed out that in the U.S.,
up to one third of the overtime hours people log are mandatory.
Mandatory overtime may create tension and stress for some workers,
which could contribute to injury risk, Dembe said.
But whether that's the case is
unclear, as the study data didn't separate mandatory from voluntary
overtime.
If long work hours are in fact a risk
factor for injury, a potential preventive measure could be to ensure
employees get adequate "rest breaks," according to Dembe. These, he
said, could take the form of both short breaks during the day, as well
as days off -- with, for example, limits on how many days in a row an
employee can work extended hours. -- Reuters
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