Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Office with windows boosts health of workers

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 Aug, 2014 07:43 AM
    The windows in your office may open gateways to good health as researchers have found that daylight in office improves worker's sleep, physical activity and quality of life.
     
    Employees with windows in the workplace received 173 percent more white light exposure during work hours and slept an average of 46 minutes more per night than employees who did not have the natural light exposure in the workplace, the findings showed.
     
    "There is increasing evidence that exposure to light during the day, particularly in the morning, is beneficial to your health via its effects on mood, alertness and metabolism," said Phyllis Zee, a neurologist and sleep specialist at Northwestern University in the US.
     
    "The study results confirm that light during the natural daylight hours has powerful effects on health," Zee added.
     
    There was also a trend for workers in offices with windows to have more physical activity than those without windows.
     
    Workers without windows reported poorer scores than their counterparts on quality of life measures related to physical problems and vitality.
     
    "Light is the most important synchronising agent for the brain and body," said Ivy Cheung, a Ph.D. candidate in neuroscience in Zee's lab at Northwestern.
     
    A simple design solution to augment daylight penetration in office buildings would be set to make sure the workstations are within 20 to 25 feet of the peripheral walls containing the windows, said co-author Mohamed Boubekri from University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
     
    The study involved 49 day-shift office workers; 27 in windowless workplaces and 22 in workplaces with windows.
     
    The study appeared in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Robot sex to determine how life began

    Robot sex to determine how life began
    This may come straight from Ripley's Believe It or Not! Scientists have performed robot sex to find how life began on earth. Scientists used rat-sized robots to study evolutionary patterns over thousands of generations without them growing old in the process.

    Robot sex to determine how life began

    Internal body clock puzzle solved

    Internal body clock puzzle solved
    Our internal body clock, influenced by the exposure to light, dictates the wake-sleep cycle.

    Internal body clock puzzle solved

    Want to be happy? Be extrovert

    Want to be happy? Be extrovert
    If happiness is what you are seeking, just be yourself - call an old friend to dinner or smile at a passerby - as a study has found that people with outgoing behaviour are a happier lot across cultures.

    Want to be happy? Be extrovert

    Bedtime TV affects kids' sleep badly

    Bedtime TV affects kids' sleep badly
    Kids who watch more television sleep for shorter duration, a study has confirmed.

    Bedtime TV affects kids' sleep badly

    Ladies! Watch your weight to cut breast cancer risk

    Ladies! Watch your weight to cut breast cancer risk
    Gear up for some physical exercise sessions as the risk of breast cancer may go up by 210 percent in obese and overweight women with a certain genetic marker, said a study.

    Ladies! Watch your weight to cut breast cancer risk

    Doctors can now grow engineered vaginas in women

    Doctors can now grow engineered vaginas in women
    In a major breakthrough, scientists are now growing specialised organs such as vagina in the lab and successfully implanting them in patients. Four teenage girls received such an implant and the organs are working “normally” now, a study has said.

    Doctors can now grow engineered vaginas in women