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Health and safety problems associated with long working hours: A review of the current position

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TLDR
There is currently sufficient evidence to raise concerns about the risks to health and safety of long working hours, however, much more work is required to define the level and nature of those risks.
Abstract
The European Community Directive on Working Time, which should have been implemented in member states of the European Community by November 1996, contains several requirements related to working hours, including the right of employees to refuse to work more than 48 hours a week. The United Kingdom government attempted to oppose the Directive, arguing that there is no convincing evidence that hours of work should be limited on health and safety grounds. Much of the research in this area has focused on the problems of shiftworking and previous reviews have therefore tended to emphasise this aspect of working hours. However, there is much less information about the effects of overtime work, which is a central element of the terms of the Directive. This paper reviews the current evidence relating to the potential effects on health and performance of extensions to the normal working day. Several gaps in the literature are identified. Research to date has been restricted to a limited range of health outcomes--namely, mental health and cardiovascular disorders. Other potential effects which are normally associated with stress--for example, gastrointestinal disorders, musculoskeletal disorders, and problems associated with depression of the immune system, have received little attention. Also, there have been few systematic investigations of performance effects, and little consideration of the implications for occupational exposure limits of extensions to the working day. Existing data relate largely to situations where working hours exceed 50 a week and there is a lack of information on hours below this level, which is of direct relevance to the European Community proposal. Finally, it is clear from investigations relating to shiftwork that a range of modifying factors are likely to influence the level and nature of health and performance outcomes. These include the attitudes and motivation of the people concerned, the job requirements, and other aspects of the organisational and cultural climate. It is concluded that there is currently sufficient evidence to raise concerns about the risks to health and safety of long working hours. However, much more work is required to define the level and nature of those risks.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of overtime and long work hours on occupational injuries and illnesses: new evidence from the United States.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed the impact of overtime and extended working hours on the risk of occupational injuries and illnesses among a nationally representative sample of working adults from the United States.
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Work-related stress and depressive disorders.

TL;DR: The findings from occupational stress research is consistent with the more general life event stress literature showing that specific acute work-related stressful experiences contribute to "depression" and, more importantly perhaps, that enduring "structural" occupational factors, which may differ according to occupation, can also contribute to psychological disorders.
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Theories of musculoskeletal injury causation.

TL;DR: It is suggested that while these theories may explain the immediate mechanism of precipitation of injuries, they all operate simultaneously and interact to modulate injuries to varying degrees in different cases.
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Health effects of shift work and extended hours of work

TL;DR: Workers who work other schedules either on shifts or with extended hours which transcend the day-night work-sleep pattern are referred to as abnormal working hours as discussed by the authors, which can occur on either day or shift work due to either a high number of hours worked per day or a higher number of days worked per week.
Journal ArticleDOI

Long workhours and health.

TL;DR: Support for the physiological recovery mechanism seems stronger than support for the behavioral life-style mechanism, but the evidence is inconclusive because many studies did not control for potential confounders.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Association of specific overt behavior pattern with blood and cardiovascular findings: blood cholesterol level, blood clotting time, incidence of arcus senilis, and clinical coronary artery disease

Meyer Friedman, +1 more
- 21 Mar 1959 - 
TL;DR: Three groups of men, selected solely according to the behavior pattern which they habitually manifested in their work, were compared and found that this pattern per se was largely responsible for the striking differences found.
Journal ArticleDOI

The measurement of well-being and other aspects of mental health

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe new instruments for the measurement of both job-related and non-job int-nta! health, which cover two axes of affective well-being, based upon dimensions of pleasure and arousal, and reported competence, aspiration and negative job carryover.
Journal ArticleDOI

Occupational sources of stress: a review of the literature relating to coronary heart disease and mental ill health

TL;DR: Coronary heart disease and mental ill health together, therefore, represent a serious cost for industry both in human and financial terms.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of hours of work on health: A meta-analytic review.

TL;DR: A quantitative and qualitative review of existing literature on working hours and health indicated small, but significant positive mean correlations between overall health Symptoms, physiological and psychological health symptoms, and hours of work.
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