LIVING HEALTHY Published September18, 2014 By Staff Reporter

Better Sleep Means Better Performance at Work: Study

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Woman Sleeping Peaceful
(Photo : Woman Sleeping Peaceful (tcwchiro))

A new study that involved 3,700 people from Finland, ages from 30-64 were tracked for seven years  proposes that having enough sleep every night makes one less susceptible to ailments that causes working people to file sick leaves from work. 

Lower risks of taking time off from work due to sickness were found in people who have in between seven and eight hours of sleep a night, seven hours and 38 minutes for women and seven hours and 46 minutes for men. The investigators saw that people who sleep more than nine hours or less than six hours are more probable to have long absences from work because of sickness.

Using sleeping pills and waking early in the morning is insomnia-related symptoms were all connected with an important growth in day off from work because of sickness.

Principal investigator Tea Lallukka, a specialized researcher at the Finnish Institute of Occupational Health, said in a journal news release that those who sleep 10 or more hours , or 5 or less hours, were having day offs every 4.6 to 8.8 days or more than those people who has excellent sleep duration.  Consecutive sickness day off due to too long or too short sleep can be lessened by optimal sleep duration.

Up to 28 percent could be reduced in the direct costs of ailment-related work absences to the Finnish businesses and government if the staff members sleeping problems could be dealt with as calculated by the researchers.  

According to Lalluka, detection of early symptoms of insomnia could aid and prevent ailment-related absences and health deterioration, welfare and functioning.  Triumphant avoidance of insomnia not only advocates work ability and health in staff members, but it can also be a start to great funds in shortened sickness absence costs.

However, a cause-and-effect relationship between sleep duration and ailing days weren't verified in the study.

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