Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Why Frequent Business Travel Is Bad For You

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 Jan, 2018 01:31 PM
    If you're travelling for business two weeks or more a month, you are more likely to have trouble sleeping than those who travel one to six nights monthly.
     
     
    According to a latest study, frequent business travellers even report symptoms of anxiety and depression and are more likely to smoke.
     
     
    The research has been conducted by researchers at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health and City University of New York.
     
     
    Among those who consume alcohol, extensive business travel is associated with symptoms of alcohol dependence. Poor behavioral and mental health outcomes significantly increased as the number of nights away from home for business travel rose.
     
     
    This is one of the first studies to report the effects of business travel on non-infectious disease health risks.
     
     
    The Global Business Travel Association Foundation estimates there were nearly 503 million person-business trips in 2016 in the U.S. compared to 488 million in the prior year.
     
     
    "Although business travel can be seen as a job benefit and can lead to occupational advancement, there is a growing literature showing that extensive business travel is associated with risk of chronic diseases associated with lifestyle factors," said Andrew Rundle, DrPH, associate professor of Epidemiology at the Mailman School of Public Health.
     
     
    "The field of occupational travel medicine needs to expand beyond its current focus on infectious disease, cardiovascular disease risks, violence and injury to bring more focus to the behavioral and mental health consequences of business travel."
     
     
     
     
    The study was based on the de-identified health records of 18,328 employees who underwent a health assessment in 2015 through their corporate wellness work benefits program provided by EHE International, Inc.
     
     
    The EHE International health exam measured depressive symptoms with the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), anxiety symptoms with the Generalized Anxiety Scale (GAD-7) and alcohol dependence with the CAGE scale.
     
     
    A score above 4 on the Generalized Anxiety Scale (GAD-7) was reported by 24 percent of employees, and 15 percent scored above a 4 on the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), indicating that mild or worse anxiety or depressive symptoms were common in this employee population. Among those who consume alcohol, a CAGE score of 2 or higher indicates the presence of alcohol dependence and was found in 6 percent of employees who drank. GAD-7 and PHQ-9 scores and CAGE scores of 2 or higher increased with increasing nights away from home for business travel.
     
     
    These data are consistent with analyses of medical claims data from World Bank employees which found that the largest increase in claims among their business travelers was for psychological disorders related to stress.
     
     
    Employers and employees should consider new approaches to improve employee health during business trips that go beyond the typical travel health practice of providing immunizations and medical evacuation services, according to Rundle, whose earlier research found that extensive business travel was associated with higher body mass index, obesity, and higher blood pressure.
     
     
     
    "At the individual-level, employees who travel extensively need to take responsibility for the decisions they make around diet, exercise, alcohol consumption, and sleep. However, to do this, employees will likely need support in the form of education, training, and a corporate culture that emphasizes healthy business travel. Employers should provide employees who travel for business with accommodations that have access to physical activity facilities and healthy food options."
     
     
    The results are published in the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Ontario Man Shoots Himself While Trying To Make Necklace From Bullet

    Ontario Man Shoots Himself While Trying To Make Necklace From Bullet
    Durham Regional Police say a 50-year-old Oshawa, Ont., man tried to pull apart a bullet with vise grips around 5 p.m. on Tuesday.

    Ontario Man Shoots Himself While Trying To Make Necklace From Bullet

    Suspected Cocaine Found On Bottom Of Airplane Food Trolleys: CBSA

    TORONTO — The Canada Border Services Agency says it has seized seven kilograms of suspected cocaine from the bottom of food trolleys on an airplane.

    Suspected Cocaine Found On Bottom Of Airplane Food Trolleys: CBSA

    US University Receives USD 1.5 Million Grant For Jainism Studies

    US University Receives USD 1.5 Million Grant For Jainism Studies
    An Indian-origin philanthropist in the US has made a grant of USD 1.5 million to a prestigious American University to advance studies in Jainism.

    US University Receives USD 1.5 Million Grant For Jainism Studies

    Malaysia Plans Measures To Attract More Indian Tourists

    Malaysia Plans Measures To Attract More Indian Tourists
    Concerned over Malaysia losing Indian tourists to other South-East Asian countries in recent years, the Malaysian government has come up with certain measures to check the fall in numbers and plans to make further investment to attract more tourists.

    Malaysia Plans Measures To Attract More Indian Tourists

    American Girl To Sell Its First-Ever Boy Doll

    American Girl To Sell Its First-Ever Boy Doll
    NEW YORK — For the first time in its more than 30-year history, American Girl will sell a boy version of its pricey dolls.

    American Girl To Sell Its First-Ever Boy Doll

    At Least 72 Dead As ISIS Bombing Rips Through Lal Shahbaz Shrine In Sehwan, Sindh

    At Least 72 Dead As ISIS Bombing Rips Through Lal Shahbaz Shrine In Sehwan, Sindh
    A devastating explosion, claimed by the Islamic State, ripped through a Sufi shrine in Sehwan town of Pakistan's Sindh province on Thursday, killing at least 72 people, including 12 women and four children, and injuring over 250 others.

    At Least 72 Dead As ISIS Bombing Rips Through Lal Shahbaz Shrine In Sehwan, Sindh