| Working
long hours harder on women's health!
Women
who work long hours eat more high-fat and high-sugar snacks, exercise
less, drink more caffeine and, if smokers, smoke more than their
male colleagues!
Friday,
July 14, 2006 - CNN
LONDON, England (Reuters)
-- Working long hours has a greater negative impact on women than
men because it makes them more likely to smoke, drink coffee and
eat unhealthy food.
Both sexes consume less alcohol
if they spend more time working, researchers said this week, but
toiling extra hours makes women crave unhealthy snacks.
"Women who work long hours
eat more high-fat and high-sugar snacks, exercise less, drink more
caffeine and, if smokers, smoke more than their male colleagues,"
said Dr. Daryl O'Connor, a researcher at Britain's Leeds University.
"For men, working longer hours
has no negative impact on exercise, caffeine intake or smoking,"
O'Connor said in a statement released by the Economic and Social
Research Council, which funded his study.
O'Connor's team of scientists were
studying the impact of stress on eating habits. They looked at what
causes stress at home and at work and how people react to it.
The results show that one or more
stressful events such as making a presentation, a meeting with the
boss or missing a deadline was linked to eating more between-meal
snacks and fewer or smaller portions of fruits and vegetables.
"Stress disrupts people's normal
eating habits," he said.
The people who were most vulnerable
were so-called emotional eaters.
"These individuals have higher
levels of vulnerability and tend to turn to food as an escape from
self-awareness," O'Connor said.
"When they feel anxious or
emotionally aroused or negative about themselves, they try to avoid
these negative feelings by turning their attention to food."
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