Showing posts with label Work Place. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Work Place. Show all posts

Monday, December 2, 2013

Working overtime could boost risk for major depressive episode

Regularly working long hours in the office might increase your risk of a serious depressive episode, according to a new study.

According to findings published in the journal PloS ONE on Wednesday, people who regularly work 11 hours or more each day are more than twice as likely to experience a major episode of depression than colleagues who stick with an eight-hour work day.


Researchers from the Finnish Institute of Occupational Health and Queen Mary University of London examined records of more than 2,000 London-based white-collar workers in a five-year study. None of the recruits had a recent history of depression when they were enrolled in the study.

Those who worked 11 hours or more each day were between 2.3 and 2.5 times more likely to develop a major depressive episode than those who worked seven-to-eight-hour days. Researchers controlled for other factors, such as smoking, alcohol consumption, and general health.

"Long working hours don't just affect us because of the pressure and intensity of work itself, they affect us because we don't have enough time for all the other things we need for good mental health, such as good quality sleep, relationships, and opportunities for rest and exercise," Paul Farmer, chief executive of leading British mental health charity Mind, told WebMD. "Every time we squeeze more work in, many of us will be squeezing something else out.

While other studies have been done on work hours and depression, "results have not been conclusive because there is no standardized benchmark for what constitutes a 'normal' working day," reports WebMD.

A previous study by the same researchers, which also relied on the same database of London-based workers, found that overtime was linked with a 60 percent increase in coronary heart disease.

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Impact of Disturbance on Performance

The following reasons are help us to ask excuse from our boss, when we did not complete our task.

• Official meetings and appointments

• Telephone calls

• Personal breaks and lunch breaks

• Official visitors

• A need to interrupt current activity to make a copy of something, sends a fax, or coordinates with another worker

• Fire drills, hazard alarms, or other emergencies

• Adverse weather

• Power outages

• Equipment breakdowns

• Holds for quality checks or coordination

• Absentees whose work must be absorbed by others

• Turnover of key personnel-new ones must be brought up to speed

• Higher headquarters or outside agency inspections, audits, and reviews

• Secretaries/clerks delivering mail and messages

• Noise and conversations from adjacent work areas

• Unusual activity outside office windows

• Running out of something-paper, staples, etc.

• Misplacing something; and

• Forgetting something

Certain actions or policies may minimize the disruption and time loss effect of some of the above items, but the potential is not significant.