Over a Decade or Longer, Risk Increases Beyond 45
Hours per Week
Newswise, March 7, 2016—
Working long hours—particularly 46 hours per week or more—may increase the
long-term risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) events such as heart attack,
reports a study in the March Journal of Occupational and Environmental
Medicine, official publication of the American College of Occupational and
Environmental Medicine (ACOEM).
"In general, we found that the risk of CVD increased as
the average weekly working hours increased," write Sadie H. Conway, PhD,
of University of Texas Health Sciences Center, Houston, and colleagues.
They
note that among full-time workers, CVD risk appears lowest between 40 and 45
hours per week.
The researchers analyzed the relationship between work hours and
CVD using data on more than 1,900 participants from a long-term follow-up study
of work and health.
All participants had been employed for at least ten years.
During the study, a physician-diagnosed CVD event—angina, coronary heart
disease or heart failure, heart attack, high blood pressure, or stroke—occurred
in about 43 percent of participants.
Risk of CVD events increased by one percent for each
additional hour worked per week over at least ten years, after adjustment for
age, sex, racial/ethnic group, and pay status.
The difference was significant
only for full-time workers, not part-timers. Among those who worked more than
30 hours per week, risk increased as weekly hours approached 40, but then
decreased again between 40 and 45 hours per week.
Beginning at 46 hours, increasing work hours were
progressively associated with increased risk of CVD. Compared to people who
averaged 45 hours per week for ten years or longer, overall CVD risk was
increased by 16 percent for those who worked 55 hours per week and by 35
percent for those who worked 60 hours per week.
While previous research has suggested increased CVD risk with
longer working hours, the new study is the first to show a
"dose-response" effect.
Dr. Conway comments, "This study
provides specific evidence on long work hours and an increase the risk of CVD,
thereby providing a foundation for CVD prevention efforts focused on work
schedule practices, which may reduce the risk of CVD for millions of working
Americans."
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