Tuesday, 21 February 2023

The mental and physical benefits of a four-day work week

Plus more health news |

Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
  
A four-day work week improves employees' health in numerous ways
By Jamie Ducharme
Health Correspondent

As many of us get back to work after the Presidents’ Day long weekend, it’s a fitting time to share the results of a large new report: Four-day work weeks are good for your health.

At least, that’s what researchers concluded after surveying almost 3,000 workers from 61 companies (most based in the U.K.) that tried out four-day work weeks from June to December of last year. After the six-month trial period, almost all employers and employees said they liked and wanted to continue with these shorter schedules, and workers reported health benefits ranging from lower levels of stress and burnout to better sleep and more time for exercise.

Will U.S. workers someday get to enjoy these same health benefits? Maybe. The researchers behind the new report told me they’re optimistic that office culture is shifting, slowly but surely.

READ MORE

 
Share the story
What else to read
Why Daydreaming Is So Good For You
By Monica C. Parker
On average, we daydream nearly 47% of our waking hours. There's a good reason why, writes Monica C. Parker.
Read More »
What the Ozempic Obsession Misses About Food and Health
By Tess Bredesen
The choices we make are about so much more than weight loss.
Read More »
How COVID-19 Changes the Heart—Even After the Virus Is Gone
By Alice Park
A study adds new evidence that SARS-CoV-2—the virus that causes COVID-19—could have a lasting impact on the heart.
Read More »
EPA Takes Over Cleanup of Toxic Ohio Train Derailment, With Norfolk Southern to Foot the Bill
By JOHN SEEWER and MICHAEL RUBINKAM / AP
The EPA will take over responsibility for cleaning up the toxic waste of the Norfolk Southern train derailment; the railway will pay the bills.
Read More »
What to Know About Severe Asthma in Kids
By Markham Heid
In children, severe asthma can be an unruly medical condition.
Read More »
ONE LAST READ
The depression test contributing to over-diagnosis and misdiagnosis

It’s no secret that pharmaceutical companies aggressively market their products to doctors in hopes of driving prescriptions, and a new investigation in STAT shows just how intertwined marketing and medicine are.

Reporter Olivia Goldhill details how a marketer working for Pfizer helped develop a depression screening tool that is still widely—and, in many cases, improperly—used today.

Read More »

If you were forwarded this and want to sign up to receive it daily, click here.

Today's newsletter was written by Jamie Ducharme and edited by Angela Haupt.

 
 
 
 
 
 

No comments:

Post a Comment