Long Working Hours and Cognitive Function
The Whitehall II Study
This study examined the association between long working hours and cognitive function in middle age. Data were collected in 1997–1999 (baseline) and 2002–2004 (follow-up) from a prospective study of 2,214 British civil servants who were in full-time employment at baseline and had data on cognitive tests and covariates. A battery of cognitive tests (short-term memory, Alice Heim 4-I, Mill Hill vocabulary, phonemic fluency, and semantic fluency) were measured at baseline and at follow-up. Compared with working 40 hours per week at most, working more than 55 hours per week was associated with lower scores in the vocabulary test at both baseline and follow-up. Long working hours also predicted decline in performance on the reasoning test (Alice Heim 4-I). Similar results were obtained by using working hours as a continuous variable; the associations between working hours and cognitive function were robust to adjustments for several potential confounding factors including age, sex, marital status, education, occupation, income, physical diseases, psychosocial factors, sleep disturbances, and health risk behaviors. This study shows that long working hours may have a negative effect on cognitive performance in middle age.
Similar entries
- Long hours link to dementia risk
- Hard work can kill you- study
- Effect of 2-y n–3 long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid supplementation on cognitive function in older people
- Dual-tasking and gait in people with Mild Cognitive Impairment. The effect of working memory
- Cognitive function and psychological well-being: findings from a population-based cohort
- Brain tissue volumes in relation to cognitive function and risk of dementia
- Low dose aspirin and cognitive function in middle aged to elderly adults: randomised controlled trial
- Education and trajectories of cognitive decline over 9 years in very old people: methods and risk analysis
- Cognitive Decline Sets In as Early as Age 45, UK Study
- Metabolic syndrome linked to memory loss in older people





