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Working hours have spiked since the onset of the crisis
This means that during such a difficult time, you could easily end up working longer hours and overworking. The situation can feel even trickier for parents who are currently at home with their children, given that they are likelier to be working in the evening to catch up. Sure enough, according to NordVPN, there is evidence of employee hours having spiked since the onset of the coronavirus outbreak. Workers in the US have added three hours to their average workday, for example. Meanwhile, in the UK, France, Spain and Canada, workdays typically went up by two hours each.
Unfortunately, not only does overworking negatively impact on mental health at a time that is already testing for many of us, but it also adversely affects all-round productivity. The stress associated with overworking could even leave your immune system weakened, which is one of the last things you will want to happen during a pandemic. Research cited by the American Psychological Association (APA) has made this link between stress and immune response. Another 2005 study referenced by the APA found that social isolation could also weaken immunity – an obvious cause for concern for those currently working from home alone.
So, with this in mind, here are some tips for guarding against overworking as the coronavirus outbreak continues.
Once the working day is over:
It’s easy to feel guilty if you aren’t working more hours than usual during the coronavirus pandemic. After all, if you’re working from home with the associated lack of commuting time, or demand for your usual services has temporarily dropped, it might seem that you have more time to fill with other work. Alternatively, you may have seen increased business since the outbreak started – in which case, it may seem inevitable that you need to put in more hours. Furthermore, at a time when many of us who still have jobs are worried about being able to keep them, we might understandably feel that the pressure is now on to perform, putting in the hours to ensure our position is secure in the future.
However, a feeling that you ‘need’ to work more right now can also be a slippery slope that causes you to venture into bad habits, such as overworking, imperilling your health and wellness when you most need to protect yourself. It’s therefore important to have a sense of perspective, letting go of the unrealistic expectations you ‘think’ your employer currently has of you.
Adopt simple, but stringent measures like the above, then, and you will be able to better shield yourself from the dangerous consequences of overworking during this very testing time for us all.
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Robby Vanuxem is the Managing Director of Hays Belgium.
Robby Vanuxem has over 20 years of industry experience, including over 15 in Hays. He started in 2000 in the world of HR and worked his way up the ranks – from consultant over Business Director to Regional Director – until he reached the Managing Director position in 2015.
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