It has been established that atypical working hours, i.e., those that fall outside the traditional 9 am to 5 pm framework, can hurt workers' physical and mental health, as well as their social and family lives
With the rise of remote working, schedules are becoming more flexible. But staggered working hours are not without medical consequences. A study published in the journal PLOS highlights the harmful effects of atypical working hours on those who adopt them early in their careers.
It has been established that atypical working hours, ie, those that fall outside the traditional 9 am to 5 pm framework, can have a negative impact on workers' physical and mental health, as well as on their social and family lives. But a new study is based on a longer-term perspective than previous research on the subject.
Its author, Wen-Jui Han of New York University, drew on data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth-1979, which surveyed over 7,000 Americans over a 30-year period. The researcher wanted to determine whether working atypical hours at the start of a professional career had adverse repercussions decades later, once people reach their 50s.
It emerged that the majority of participants in the study worked standard 9-to-5 hours more or less regularly. Conversely, 17% had worked standard hours when they were in their 20s, before shifting to atypical or "volatile" working hours (evenings, nights, etc.). Some 12% had a similar pattern of employment: they started their careers working standard hours, before transitioning to more variable working hours.
Wen-Jui Han found that people who had worked atypical hours during their working lives had more health problems in their 50s than those who worked from 9 am to 5 pm. They were more likely to present depressive symptoms at the age of 50, and tended to have disturbed sleep.