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Journal Article

Citation

Raediker B, Janssen D, Schomann C, Nachreiner F. Chronobiol. Int. 2006; 23(6): 1305-1316.

Affiliation

Gesellschaft fur Arbeits-, Wirtschafts- und Organisationspsychologische Forschung e.V. (GAWO), Oldenburg, Germany.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/07420520601096245

PMID

17190715

Abstract

Statistical analyses of the relation between the amount of working hours and impairments to health, based on data from a European survey on working conditions in 2000, clearly reveal that there is a substantial correlation between the number of working hours per week and the frequencies of health complaints. This applies to both musculo-skeletal disorders as well as to psycho-vegetative complaints. The relationship of the duration of the exposure to working conditions to health impairments is moderated by a great number of individual (e.g., age) and situational (e.g., shift-work) variables, showing additive or interactive effects for which selected examples have been presented. In general, however, there is a consistent functional relationship between the number or working hours and their effects on the workers that holds over a great variety of conditions. It is argued that requests for extending working hours should thus be handled with care.


Language: en

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