City
Epaper

Researchers find sleep issues in older employees have connection with mental stress factors

By ANI | Published: August 14, 2022 2:51 PM

A recent study from the Universities of Eastern Finland and Turku has improved understanding of an under-researched topic related to sleep among older workers. The study included 2,771 Finnish municipal workers who were nearing retirement.

Open in App

A recent study from the Universities of Eastern Finland and Turku has improved understanding of an under-researched topic related to sleep among older workers. The study included 2,771 Finnish municipal workers who were nearing retirement.

The study examined how mental and physical working conditions, stressful life situations, and work-life balance were associated with sleep problems in older employees.

Work and nonwork stressors are associated with sleep problems

In another population study, more than half of Finnish men aged 60-69 and nearly 70% of Finnish women reported symptoms of insomnia during the past month.

"In our study, we identified four different components that are associated with mental stress. These are physical workload and shift work, psychosocial workload, social and environmental nonwork adversity, and life event- and health-related nonwork adversity," Professor of Psychology Marianna Virtanen of the University of Eastern Finland says.

Social and environmental nonwork adversity refers to loneliness and little interaction with one's neighbours. Life event- and health-related nonwork adversity refers to a stressful event in one's life, or the provision of informal care.

"The more an employee had work and nonwork stressors, the more problems they also had with sleep."

Flexibility is an important target for development.

Different stress factors were associated with sleep problems in different ways: work-related stress was linked to current sleep problems, whereas loneliness and stress related to one's living environment predicted increasing sleep problems during the follow-up. Psychosocial working conditions were also associated with sleep quality.

"In this study, psychosocial working conditions were described by the contents and arrangements of work, such as opportunities for influencing and working hours, as well as by competence development, and fair management."

Funded by the Finnish Work Environment Fund, the project provides information on factors at which development measures and interventions could be targeted for older employees.

"Especially when there are stress factors in private life, such as severe illness or death in the family, or being an informal caregiver for someone, flexible working hours are an important target for development," Virtanen concludes.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: University of Eastern FinlandUniversity of eastern finland
Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyArterial stiffness cause metabolic syndrome in adolescents: Study

TechnologyStudy finds taking higher-than-recommended doses of vitamin D reduce risk of atrial fibrillation

TechnologyInhaled beta-2 agonists not linked to lower risk of Parkinson's disease: Study

TechnologyResearchers reveal how fatty fish consumption increases cell membrane fluidity

HealthPremature, low birthweight babies suffer fewer fractures than others: Study

Health Realted Stories

HealthNearly 86 pc of South Koreans call for doctors to end protest: Survey

HealthChained child admitted to mental hospital in Agra after video goes viral

HealthSri Lanka declares 71 high risk dengue zones

HealthNew blood test 'can predict' breast cancer return much before scans

Health'Curbing insulin resistance can help prevent or delay diabetes'