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Unhealthy Holiday Eating May be an Occupational Hazard
Reported January 03, 2012
(Ivanhoe Newswire) – A shift workers poor diet may now be considered an
occupational hazard. According to this study, there was an association
between type 2 diabetes and rotating shift patterns in U.S. nurses.
Shift work is now a very common pattern of work in both the developed and
developing world, with around 15-20% of the working population in Europe and
the US engaged in shift work. It is particularly prevalent in the health
care industry. Shift work is notoriously associated with poor patterns of
eating, which is exacerbated by easier access to junk food compared with
more healthy options.
The editors argue that working patterns should now be considered a specific
risk factor for obesity and type 2 diabetes, which are currently at epidemic
proportions in the developed world and likely to become so soon in the
less-developed world. They go on to suggest that firm action is needed to
address this epidemic, i.e. that "governments need to legislate to improve
the habits of consumers and take specific steps to ensure that it is easier
and cheaper to eat healthily than not". More specifically, they suggest that
unhealthy eating could legitimately be considered a new form of occupational
hazard and that workplaces, specifically those who employ shift workers,
should lead the way in eliminating this hazard.
SOURCE: PLoS, published online December, 2011
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