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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, August 28, 2015
Working longer hours increases stroke risk, major study finds
Danger
highlighted by research suggesting those working a 55-hour week face
33% increased risk of stroke than those working a 35- to 40-hour week
Workaholics
may question whether spending so much time in the office is really
worth it: those working 55 or more hours a week are 33% more likely to
suffer a stroke, research suggests. Photograph: Alamy
The likely toll of long working hours is revealed in a major new study
which shows that employees still at their desks into the evening run an
increased risk of stroke – and the longer the hours they put in, the
higher the risk.
The largest study conducted on the issue, carried out in three
continents and led by scientists at University College London, found
that those who work more than 55 hours a week have a 33% increased risk
of stroke compared with those who work a 35- to 40-hour week. They also
have a 13% increased risk of coronary heart disease.
The findings will confirm the assumptions of many that a long-hours
culture, in which people work from early in the morning until well into
the evening, with work also intruding into weekends, is potentially
harmful to health.
The researchers, publishing their findings in the Lancet medical journal,
say they cannot state categorically that long hours cause people to
have strokes – but their study shows that there is a link, and it gets
stronger as thehours people put in get longer.
“Sudden death from overwork is often caused by stroke and is believed to
result from a repetitive triggering of the stress response,” they
write. “Behavioural mechanisms, such as physical inactivity, might also
link long working hours and stroke; a hypothesis supported by evidence
of an increased risk of incident stroke in individuals who sit for long
periods at work.
“Physical inactivity can increase the risk of stroke through various
biological mechanisms and heavy alcohol consumption – a risk factor for
all types of stroke – might be a contributing factor because employees
working long hours seem to be slightly more prone to risky drinking than
are those who work standard hours.”
People who work long hours are also more likely to ignore the warning signs, they say – leading to delays in getting treatment.
Mika Kivimäki, professor of epidemiology at UCL, and colleagues looked
separately at heart disease and at stroke. For coronary heart disease,
they pulled together 25 studies involving more than 600,000 men and
women from Europe, the USA and Australia who were followed for an
average of 8.5 years.
They then pooled and analysed the data that had been collected. This
produced the finding of a 13% increase in the chances of a new diagnosis
of heart disease or hospitalisation or death.
For stroke, they analysed data from 17 studies involving nearly 530,000
men and women who were followed up for an average of 7.2 years. They
found a 1.3 times higher risk of stroke in individuals working 55 hours
or more, compared with those working a standard 35- to 40-hour week.
This association remained even after taking into account health
behaviours such as smoking, alcohol consumption and physical activity as
well as standard cardiovascular risk factors including high blood
pressure and high cholesterol.
The longer the working week, the higher was the risk of stroke. Those
working between 41 and 48 hours had a 10% higher risk of stroke and
those working 49 to 54 hours had a 27% increased risk.
Kivimäki said the scale of the study allowed the team to be more precise
about the health toll of long hours than ever before. He suggested that
doctors should take note of the possible risks to their hard-working
patients. “Health professionals should be aware that working long hours
is associated with a significantly increased risk of stroke, and perhaps
also coronary heart disease,” he said.
In a commentary in the journal, Dr Urban Janlert from Umeå University in
Sweden writes that the European Working Time Directive, meant to limit
the week to 48 hours, is not in effect in all countries. “Long working
hours are not a negligible occurrence. Among member countries of the
OECD, Turkey has the highest proportion of individuals working more than
50 hours per week (43%) and the Netherlands the lowest (less than 1%).
“Although some countries have legislation for working hours ... it is
not always implemented. Therefore, that the length of a working day is
an important determinant mainly for strokes, but perhaps also for
coronary heart disease, is an important finding.”
Dr Tim Chico, reader in cardiovascular medicine at the University of
Sheffield, said the study did not prove long working hours could cause
stroke or heart disease. “It is almost certainly impossible to prove
whether there is a direct link as this would require thousands of people
to be randomly allocated to work more or less hours and followed up for
years to see if this changes the risk of stroke, while keeping all
other behaviours the same between groups,” he said.
For many people, cutting down on working hours would be difficult or
impossible, he said. “Most of us could reduce the amount of time we
spend sitting down, increase our physical activity and improve our diet
while working and this might be more important the more time we spend at
work. We should all consider how the working environment could be
altered to promote healthy behaviour that will reduce strokes,
irrespective of how long we work.”
• This
article was amended on 24 August 2015 because the European Working Time
Directive is meant to limit the week to 48 hours, not the day to 48
hours as an earlier version said.