Various research finds that a long working week increases
the risk of a stroke, stress and mental illness. With an estimated 10 million
working days lost to work-related stress in the UK last year, finding a good
balance between the demands of home and the job now dominates concerns about
the impact of work on health. The Office of National Statistics found more than
half of British workers are satisfied with the balance of work and leisure
time, while more than a quarter are dissatisfied. The Health and Safety
Executive found 1.4 in 100 workers took time off for “work-related stress,
depression or anxiety” last year. Some employers reported that 97% of workers
struggle with work-life balance.
Practices such as working from home could do more harm than
good, research finds, as many employees never ‘switch off’. Flexible working
practices can do more harm than good to workers because they encourage an
“always on” culture that can have a heavy psychological toll, experts have
warned. There is growing concern about the risks of such policies, said ProfGail Kinman, an occupational health psychologist from the University of
Bedfordshire and the British Psychological Association.
Working away from the office or part-time can isolate employees
from social networks and career opportunities while fostering a “grazing”
instinct that keeps dangerous stress hormones at persistently high levels, they
said. Flexible working policies can also raise the risk of poor working
conditions, and create resentment among colleagues, while the blurring of lines
between work and home life is stressful for some people.
“If you keep picking at work, worrying about it, your
systems never really go down to baseline so you don’t recover properly,” said
Kinman. “You might sleep, but you don’t sleep properly, the effectiveness of
your immune system reduces. There are studies that suggest people want a quick
way to relax, which is when they tend to drink alcohol and might turn to
comfort food.” Time for personal hobbies, exercise and healthy cooking and
eating are squeezed out by work, too. Work has become more intense as new
technology enables, and even forces, people to work faster, do more, and
multi-task, said Kinman. Her research also finds rising “presenteeism” – for
example people working when they are ill.
Prof Simon Wessely, president of the Royal College of
Psychiatrists said: “We don’t know why, but there’s pretty good evidence that,
for example, there’s a link between psychological circumstances at work and
heart disease.” The biggest problem with work-life balance, however, remains
not having one or the other – being unemployed or having no social network, added
Wessely. “What we really need to change the work-life balance is more
meaningful work and more people having more social support, less loneliness,
less social isolation.”
Professional bodies like the Chartered Institute of
Personnel Development and the TUC continue to advocate flexible working and
similar practices. But they say there is growing recognition such policies only
work when employees are given a choice.
“We know more control and autonomy is effective in reducing
stress… but not all working practices have that outcome,” said Ksenia
Zheltoukhova, a research advisor at the CIPD. Good management is also widely
seen as important.
Shorter work time should be on the agenda of all class conscious workers, their unions and their parties.
ReplyDeleteIn my own union, i was involved with strike action for a long over-due shorter working week, and rather than cash-bonus being negotiated in local productivity deals our branch preferred a time-bonus - earlier finishing times. But within the trade union movement generally i think you are right...It is time to re-focus on reducing working hours across industries. The IWW's 4-hour day, 4-Day week should be their template.
ReplyDeleteTrouble is and we have to be watchful...management will intensify working conditions or concede our demands and make us all part-time with zero-hour contracts or introduce technology and reduce staff numbers to compensate themselves...
You're absolutely right, Comrade.
ReplyDelete