Image: Time to stop. (via Thinkstock)
by ABC Adelaide
Close to one-third of workers in Australia are in their workplace for 50 hours per week, a health researcher says.
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The head of public health at the School of Population Health at Adelaide University, Dr Dino Pisaniello, said the little research that had been done on the need to achieve a work-life balance showed long work hours affected not only the individual but their family.
“About 30 per cent of people, in males anyway, are working 50 hours a week [and] that’s the statistic that’s of concern – the number of people who are working two hours a day extra,” he told 891 ABC Adelaide.
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“That might be because of the demands of the job, it might be because they like their job, but for those people who don’t think it’s helping them in a career sense it may be introducing all sorts of health-related issues.”
Dr Pisaniello said research showed the health dangers extended beyond the individual doing the long hours in the workplace.
“Fathers, for example, who are doing this extra time [find] that cuts into the work-life balance leading to things that are adverse for children,” he said.