Do More With Reuters
Partner Services

Passive work means less activity off the job, too

Sat Nov 7, 2009 1:54am IST
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

By Anne Harding

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Do you have an unchallenging job with little control over what you do? You may be more likely to be a couch potato in your leisure time, a new study shows.

"These characteristics of the job spill over into their non-working life," says Dr. David Gimeno of University College London, one of the researchers on the study.

Gimeno and his colleagues looked at how working in "passive jobs"-where the worker has little stress and little control-affected leisure time activity by looking at 4,291 male and 1,794 female British civil servants, who ranged in age from 35 to 55. Over a five-year period, the study participants were categorized at three different time points based on how passive their jobs were and their amount of leisure-time physical activity.

Job passivity didn't influence how active women were outside work. But men who were in passive jobs at all three time points were 16 percent more likely to have low levels of leisure time physical activity than men who had never worked in a passive job.

"These are very small effects," Gimeno said in an interview. Nevertheless, he added, they are likely to affect many, many people-resulting in a large health impact for society as a whole.

Given the health risks of a sedentary lifestyle, he and his colleagues note in Occupational and Environmental Medicine, "upstream interventions that reduce dull, demotivating and unchallenging jobs may be worthy of consideration."

Evidence on how the nature of a person's job affects his or her leisure-time physical activity has been mixed, Gimeno and his team note, and research has not looked at how a person's job characteristics over time might affect their lifestyle.

"We need to consider what type of jobs we are creating," the researcher added. "That doesn't mean that everyone needs to be an artist."  Continued...

Reuters correspondent Sourav Mishra recounts the unforgettable night of Nov. 26 at Mumbai's Leopold Cafe
Back from the Dead
REUTERS WITNESS - 26/11

Reuters correspondent Sourav Mishra recounts the night of Nov. 26 at Leopold Cafe.  Full Article | Full Coverage 

REUTERS WEEKEND

9: Michael Lee-Chin Crystal, Royal Ontario Museum; Toronto. What I.M. Pei’s pyramid is to the Louvre, so is the relatively new Michael Lee-Chin Crystal to the Royal Ontario Museum. While many praise the glass structure, just as many are troubled by the incongruity to the original, more traditional museum that still sits directly beside it.  REUTERS/Yan Sun/Handout
Travel Picks

World's top 10 ugliest buildings.  Full Article | Slideshow 

Revellers dance at an office Christmas party in London December 13, 2007.  REUTERS/Finbarr O'Reilly
Travel Picks

Top 10 cities to party the night away.  Full Article 

 
Talk show host Oprah Winfrey waves to people at the Main Street in Copenhagen in this September 30, 2009 file photo. REUTERS/Scanpix/Jeppe Michael Jensen/Files
End of Oprah?

Winfrey says ending TV show "feels right."  Full Article | Slideshow 

Dresses worn by actress Audrey Hepburn are displayed at a press preview of the Tanja Star-Busman collection of Hepburn memorabilia at Sotheby's in New York November 20, 2009.  REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
Hepburn Auction

Audrey Hepburn's dresses will be sold at auction.  Full Article 

 
One Year Later

A look back at the events of 26/11 ahead of the first anniversary of the militant attacks in Mumbai that killed 166 people.  Slideshow | Full Coverage 

Photo
Ageing Santa gets $100,000 facelift for Christmas Friday, 20 Nov 2009 

WELLINGTON (Reuters) - A Santa in New Zealand with a droopy eye has received a NZ$100,000 ($74,000) face-lift in the run-up to Christmas so that his aging face does not scare children.  Full Article