Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Turning Off E-mail App On Phone Can Make You Happier

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Jan, 2016 01:22 PM
    If reducing stress is on your mind, turning off the e-mail app on your phone can be an easy and inexpensive way to bring happiness back into your life, new research suggests.
     
    E-mail can simultaneously be a great communication tool and a source of frustration and stress, the findings showed.
     
    In a survey of around 2,000 people, London-based London-based Future Work Centre found that people who automatically receive e-mail on their devices are more likely to report higher levels of e-mail pressure.
     
    The study also pointed out that checking e-mail earlier in the morning or later at night is associated with higher levels of email pressure.
     
    "People who reported higher levels of e-mail pressure also experienced greater interference between work and home - and home and work,” the report said.
     
    However, how much e-mail pressure you feel and the extent to which it interferes with your work-life balance may depend on your personality.
     
    "Our research shows that e-mail is a double-edged sword. Whilst it can be a valuable communication tool, it is clear that it is a source of stress of frustration for many of us,” said lead author Richard MacKinnon, insight director, Future Work Centre, was quoted as saying by Daily Mail.
     
    "The people who reported it being most useful to them also reported the highest levels of email pressure,” MacKinnon noted.
     
    Managers experience significantly higher levels of e-mail pressure when compared to non-managers, the results of the survey showed.
     
    "But the habits we develop, the emotional reactions we have to messages and the unwritten organisational etiquette around e-mail, combine into a toxic source of stress which could be negatively impacting our productivity and wellbeing,” MacKinnon said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Apparent Provincial Climate Unity Gives Trudeau Tailwind En Route To Paris

    Apparent Provincial Climate Unity Gives Trudeau Tailwind En Route To Paris
    A meeting of Canada's first ministers Monday in Ottawa — the first in almost seven years — ended with 11 provinces and territories humming from the same environmental hymn book as Trudeau's newly elected Liberals.

    Apparent Provincial Climate Unity Gives Trudeau Tailwind En Route To Paris

    Syrian Refugee Plan Milestone For One Man, New Beginning For Thousands Of Others

    Almost exactly three years ago, Faisal Alazem appeared before a House of Commons committee and urged Canada to do more to help the millions of Syrians caught up in that country's brutal civil war.

    Syrian Refugee Plan Milestone For One Man, New Beginning For Thousands Of Others

    Rachel Notley Vows Tight Controls On $3Billion Carbon Tax To Ensure Only For Green Projects

    Rachel Notley Vows Tight Controls On $3Billion Carbon Tax To Ensure Only For Green Projects
    Notley says none of the money is to go to broader or unrelated expenditures such as paying down the deficit and debt.

    Rachel Notley Vows Tight Controls On $3Billion Carbon Tax To Ensure Only For Green Projects

    Canada Is Back: Rocker Neil Young Supports Alberta's Carbon Tax, Pleased By Liberal Government

    "I'm very happy," said the 70-year-old Canadian who has lived in California for years.

    Canada Is Back: Rocker Neil Young Supports Alberta's Carbon Tax, Pleased By Liberal Government

    B.C. Green To Seek Party Leadership As Federal Green Leader Attends Announcement

    Oak Bay-Gordon Head MLA Andrew Weaver will announce his candidacy Tuesday at the University of Victoria, where he will follow his leadership announcement with a speech.

    B.C. Green To Seek Party Leadership As Federal Green Leader Attends Announcement

    Canada Must Tailor Post-secondary Programs To Boost Economic Growth: CIBC Head

    Canada Must Tailor Post-secondary Programs To Boost Economic Growth: CIBC Head
    CIBC chief executive Victor Dodig told The Canadian Press in an interview Tuesday that much of Canada's eventual growth will come from entrepreneurs who commercialize new ideas and technologies for all sectors of the economy.

    Canada Must Tailor Post-secondary Programs To Boost Economic Growth: CIBC Head