Are you putting your health at risk in the office?

Let us get you 3
Quotes
"An excellent buying service"
Also get quotes for
Time to take a break: "Prolonged periods of sitting … may counteract the benefits of regular physical activity."
Time to take a break: "Prolonged periods of sitting … may counteract the benefits of regular physical activity."

Office workers need to move more, sit less and use warm-coloured lighting instead of blue-rich LEDs to help avoid some serious potential health risks, according to public health researchers.

Speaking in the leadup to Safe Work Australia Month (October), the Head of Public Health at the University of Adelaide, Professor Dino Pisaniello, said sedentary work and long, intensive hours are major issues for the office.

"Despite great gains in work safety over the past century, workplace-related injury and illness is costing around $60 billion dollars each year in Australia. Among that cost is a significant burden of the office environment," Professor Pisaniello says.

"There are some serious risks in the workplace for many Australians, but most of these are modifiable or preventable."

Sedentary behaviour

Professor Pisaniello said emerging risks include the increase in sedentary behaviour at work as well as in the home environment.

"Prolonged periods of sitting may not only be detrimental to people's health, but may also counteract the benefits of regular physical activity," he said.

So even if a worker goes to the gym at lunchtime, all of that sitting around for the rest of the day could be having a long-lasting impact on their health."

Too much to do in too short a timeframe

Professor Pisaniello  said long work hours are associated with adverse health, such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes and fatigue.

"One in five Australian working men has a 40 per cent excess coronary heart disease risk attributed to work," he said.

 "Around 30 per cent of all workers say they work at very high speed, to tight deadlines, or most of the time they have too much work for one person to do.

"The Fair Work Act 2009 provides many employees with a legal right to request flexible working arrangements, and studies have shown that workers who ask for and receive flexibility have lower 'work-life interference' which is important for health."

Improved lighting

Professor Pisaniello said laboratory studies suggest that "blue light" or "blue-rich" white LED light sources can damage the retina with long-term exposure.

He said: "Choosing office lights in the warm spectrum, favouring reds and greens over cool blues, will be more comfortable for reading and may be safer for workers' eyes.

"Today's energy-efficient LED bulbs can come in a warm spectrum as well as a cool, white spectrum."

Get 3+ quotes so you can compare and choose the supplier that's right for you