Death By Cubicle!?!?
|This is from my “other” favorite online destination
www.howstuffworks.com
Thought I was the ONLY ONE who ever believed in such a thing…
Go Figure!
dONT qUIT yOUR dAY jOB!!!
http://health.howstuffworks.com/death-by-cubicle.htm
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Distractions at Work Are More Than Just Annoying — They’re Deadly
So maybe you think you can withstand the occasional flu or backache, and these conditions certainly don’t make your cubicle deadly. But these factors can be worsened by the third feature of environmental comfort, psychological comfort. People feel psychological comfort when they perceive control and ownership over their space and a general feeling of belonging [source: Vischer]. This is why some people decorate their cubicles, but control over this type of workspace is fairly limited, as anyone who’s ever had to listen to a co-worker clip fingernails or chat for hours on the phone can attest.
The walls of a cubicle may be intended to fence a person off, but distractions are all around. Cell phones with exotic ringtones are constantly playing. Your co-workers treat the nearby copier as their personal pick-up bar and that creepy guy from the sales department keeps stopping by your cube to chat about his weekend.
Bruce Ayres/Stone/Getty Images
Another problem is seeing those cubicle walls too often. Whether you’re working long hours to get ahead or just trying to keep up in a troubled economy, the lack of a work-life balance could prove deadly. In Japan, where long hours and unpaid overtime are regular practice, death by overwork, or karoshi in Japanese, is legally recognized as an official cause of death. In 2001, karoshi was deemed to be responsible for 143 deaths [source: JICOSH]. At least one doctor has posited that karoshi is due not only to long hours, but also to the stress created by years of working with the sense of feeling trapped and powerless [source: Tubbs]. If you’ve spent years in a cramped cubicle, that description may ring a few bells.
Even if you don’t work yourself to death, stress takes its toll on your body. Stressed workers accrue health care costs that are 46 percent higher than those of a non-stressed employee [source: Schwartz]. So is the sight of your cubicle doomed to be the last thing you see before you head to the light? Find out if cubicle death can be prevented on the next page.