ScienceDaily (Jan. 13, 2012) —
In a typical working week, people spend on average 5 hours and 41
minutes per day sitting at their desk and 7 hours sleeping at night.
Prolonged sitting at your desk is not only bad for your physical health,
but potentially your mental well-being.
These are some of the key findings of research being presented the
13th of January, by Dr Myanna Duncan, Mr. Aadil Kazi and Professor
Cheryl Haslam from the Work & Health Research Centre, Loughborough
University, to delegates at the British Psychological Society's Annual
Occupational Conference, at the Crowne Plaza, Chester.
Nearly 70% of employees surveyed did not meet recommended guidelines
for physical activity; interestingly 50% of people surveyed aged 50
years and under, failed to meet these guidelines.
The findings also showed:
- That those who sit for longer at work are more likely to sit
outside of work.
- A correlation between BMI scores and sitting time at work, as one
would expect
- That more time spent sitting at work was associated with a
decrease in mental well-being.
The findings were a subset of a larger study looking at employee's
experiences of Occupational Health provision, over an 18 month period
during 2009-2011. The psychologists conducted an on-line and paper based
survey with over 1000 employees measuring employee's use and experiences
of occupational health services and their physical activity levels.
Specific measures included Lifestyle and physical activity, Domain
Specific Sitting Time Questionnaire, Work Ability Index, General Health
Questionnaire and Job Attitudes (job satisfaction, organisational
commitment, job motivation, intention to quit). Interviews and focus
groups with Occupational Health professionals were also conducted.
In the UK, as elsewhere in Europe, there are now twice as many
workers aged 50 and over as there are aged 25 or younger. Health, work
and well-being have been identified by Dame Carol Black as a key
Government priority in order to maintain the health of all workers
across their lifespan so as they are able to continue working healthily
and productively into their 70s.
Dr Duncan says "People don't need a psychologist to tell them to get
up and walk around. But if it helps, I'd tell them to put a post-it note
on their computer to remind them. Anyway go and talk to your colleagues
face to face, it's a lot more sociable and better for you than emailing
them."
Story Source:
The above story is reprinted from materials provided
by British
Psychological Society (BPS), via AlphaGalileo.