- Sputnik International
World
Get the latest news from around the world, live coverage, off-beat stories, features and analysis.

The Killer-Commute: UK Study Finds Going to Work and Back is Bad for Your Health

© AFP 2023 / DANIEL LEAL-OLIVASA London Underground train arrives at Oxford Circus station in central London on August 20, 2016, following the launch of the 24 hour night tube service
A London Underground train arrives at Oxford Circus station in central London on August 20, 2016, following the launch of the 24 hour night tube service - Sputnik International
Subscribe
It's official, well, almost, commuting to and from work every day is bad for your health, a new report in Britain claims.

This won't come as much of a surprise to the thousands of people who use Southern Railway in the south east. They've endured a summer of hell with strikes, cancellations and delays due to an industrial dispute.

#Traingate​

With Britain's 24 million commuters in mind, report "Health in a Hurry" by the Royal Society for Public Health (RSPH), suggests the stress of train delays and traffic jams is detrimental to your health.

​The average commuter eats an extra 767 calories a week on daily snacks.

​In Scotland, rail passengers have endured copious strikes due to industrial action threatened on the East Coast Mainline. In London, 155,000 commuters are forced to stand up in morning rush hour trains.

Commuting is even considered by the RSPH, to shorten your life.

"Longer commuted are potentially shortening lives," a spokesperson for the RSPH said.

​"Longer commute times are associated with increased stress, higher blood pressure and BMI, and reduce time available for health promoting activities such as cooking, exercising and sleeping."

A poll for the organization found that 44 percent of commuters had less time with family and friends, 41 percent were getting less exercise and one in three were losing sleep.

Overcrowding and anti-social behavior are cited as the most infuriating and stressful part of a daily commute by 1,500 people polled; with one in three turning to snacks for comfort.

​The RSPH is calling on employers to help by allowing more people to work from home or avoid the rush hour.

"For some of us the daily commute can be a pleasurable experience, giving time for reflection or an opportunity to relax but for an increasing number of us it is having a damaging effect on our health and well-being," Shirley Cramer, RSPH chief executive said.

​"As the length of our commute increases this impact is getting worse, including by contributing to rising levels of stress, adding to our waistlines, or eating into time we could otherwise spend doing activities which enhance our health and well-being such as sleep, exercise or time spent with family and friends." Cramer said.

Newsfeed
0
To participate in the discussion
log in or register
loader
Chats
Заголовок открываемого материала