During the COVID-19 pandemic, many have had to juggle work responsibilities at home, often alongside online schooling for their children, plus eldercare. This research may validate strong feelings regarding the challenges of longer work hours. The review showed higher risks for deaths and DALYs from ischemic heart disease and strokes among Western Pacific and South-East Asia regions, as well as men and older people. This research highlights the need for greater international labor protections to prevent exploitation of workers, as well as smaller scale assessments of our own work-life balance, or lack thereof.

Delving Into Global Health Research

The WHO and ILO conducted systematic reviews of global health data for 2016 and found that 745,194 deaths and 23.3 million DALYs from ischemic heart disease and stroke were from exposure to long working hours. Regional exposure prevalence was largest for South-East Asia, at a rate of 11.7%, and lowest in Europe, with 3.5%. The Western Pacific region had the largest increase since 2000. Findings were based on observational studies, for which causation cannot be certain. But this research demonstrated that exposure to excess work hours every week increased the risk of death and poor health outcomes.

Long Work Hours Are Only One Factor

Founder and president of the American Preventive Health Organization, Sandra El Hajj, MSc, N-MD, DHSc, says, “The WHO analyzed data from 194 countries and found that those who spend more than 55 hours working on a weekly basis are more likely to die of ischemia and stroke, but the impact on health highly depends on the workplace as well.” Long work hours are only one factor that may be relevant. El Hajj cautions that the quality of work may be influenced by a variety of factors, such as the culture of the workplace and the stressors of the job.

Longer Work Hours Reduce Productivity

Leadership consultant and clinical director of Lucid Clinical Services, Crystal Shelton, DSW, LCSW-C, says, “Studies that date all the way back to 1977 suggest that not only are longer hours harmful but there is considerable evidence that longer hours actually reduce productivity.” Findings of premature death and disability should be enough to prompt change, but given how capitalism tends to operate—especially in the U.S.—it may be more effective to highlight that long work hours do not serve productivity. Shelton says, “We are so stuck in the idea of the 40+ hour work week that even in the face of consistent, compelling evidence that it is non-optimal, we continue to remain firmly entrenched in the model.” The information in this article is current as of the date listed, which means newer information may be available when you read this. For the most recent updates on COVID-19, visit our coronavirus news page.