By AFPRelaxnews | Apr 6, 2024
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
[CAPTION]Atypical working hours can have a negative impact on the health and well-being of those who work them.
Image: Alistair Berg / Getty Images[/CAPTION]
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.
_RSS_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.
Also read: Is it time to call time on traditional office hours?