General

Higher Work Addiction May Lead To Risk Of Developing Depression

NewsGram Desk

If you are a workaholic, then there are chances you may suffer negative mental and physical health outcomes such as depression, anxiety, or sleep disorder, a new study suggests.

The study, published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, indicates that people with higher work addiction risk compared to people with low work addiction risk have twice the risk of developing depression. Sleep quality was lower to workers with a high risk of work addiction compared to workers with a low risk of work addiction. Also, women had almost twice the work addiction risk as men, the researchers said.

Follow NewsGram on Instagram to keep yourself updated.

"We found that job demands could be the most important factor that can develop risk. So this factor should be controlled or should be investigated by the organization's manager, for example, HR staff, psychologists," said researcher Morteza Charkhabi from Higher School of Economics in Russia.

Job demands at work are strongly associated with work addiction risk. Pixabay

Workaholics are people who usually work seven and more hours more than others per week. For the study, the team aimed to demonstrate the extent to which the work addiction risk is associated with the perception of work (job demands and job control) and mental health in four job categories suggested by Karasek's model or Job Demand-Control-Support model (JDCS).

The JDCS model assumes four various work environments (four quadrants) in which workers may experience a different level of job demands and job control: passive, low-strain, active, and tense/job-strain. Job control is the extent to which an employee feels control over doing work.

The researchers collected data from 187 out of 1,580 (11.8 percent) French workers who agreed to participate in a cross-sectional study. The team divided all the participants based on their occupational groups and investigated the link between work addiction risk and mental and physical health outcomes. The results show that high job demands at work are strongly associated with risk but the job control level does not play the same role. The prevalence of work addiction risk is higher for active and high-strain workers than for passive and low-strain workers. (IANS)

4 Effective Ways to Market Your Clothing Brand

Take a stroll through the US president's backyard

Scholar called 'Putin's brain' attacked on Chinese internet

US reveals proposal to loosen restrictions on marijuana

Many master's degrees aren't worth the investment, research shows