BMJ 1996;312:921-922 (13 April)

Editorials

Overwork can kill

Especially if combined with high demand, low control, and poor social support

The death of a junior doctor in Britain last year, after working excessive hours and sleeping little, brought new relevance to the question, can overwork kill? It seems reasonable to suggest that excessive workload could be harmful. In Japan, there is even a recognised syndrome of "death from overwork"; the family of a Japanese man who killed himself after working for 17 months without a day off has recently won compensation from his employer.1 But the British government disagrees with the European Union that a proposal to limit the working week to 48 hours should be regarded as a health and safety issue. Indeed, there is surprisingly little hard evidence about whether mortality can be increased by physical or psychological overwork. A recent review noted a lack of research on the health effects of the interaction of physical . . . [Full text of this article]


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This article has been cited by other articles:

  • Button, L. A (2008). Effect of social support and coping strategies on the relationship between health care-related occupational stress and health. Journal of Research in Nursing 13: 498-524 [Abstract]  
  • Hiyama, T, Yoshihara, M (2008). New occupational threats to Japanese physicians: karoshi (death due to overwork) and karojisatsu (suicide due to overwork). Occup. Environ. Med. 65: 428-429 [Full text]  
  • Borrell, C., Cortes, I., Artazcoz, L., Molinero, E., Moncada, S. (2003). Social inequalities in mortality in a retrospective cohort of civil servants in Barcelona. Int J Epidemiol 32: 386-389 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • INOUE, K., MATSUMOTO, M. (2000). Karo jisatsu (suicide from overwork): a spreading occupational threat. Occup. Environ. Med. 57: 284a-285 [Full text]  
  • Collinson, D. L., Collinson, M. (1997). `Delayering Managers': Time-Space Surveillance and its Gendered Effects. Organization 4: 375-407 [Abstract]  



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