Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Cut travel time to work and spruce up your life

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Dec, 2014 10:24 AM
    If long commuting hours to work are giving your nightmares, it is time to either change home or job.
     
    According to a new study from University of Waterloo, the more time you spend getting to and from work, the less likely you are to be satisfied with life - leading to stress and related problems.
     
    “We found that the longer it takes someone to get to work, the lower their satisfaction with life in general,” said Margo Hilbrecht, professor in applied health sciences and associate director of research for the Canadian Index of Wellbeing.
     
    While commuting has long been thought to have some upsides like providing time to unwind and transition from the workday, the new findings suggest the opposite is true for most people.
     
    "The message to employers is that encouraging flexible work hours or providing time for physical leisure can pay dividends in their employees' satisfaction with life,” Hillbrecht said.
     
    The researchers analysed data from Statistics Canada to better understand the links between commute time and well-being. 
     
    They found that on top of being linked to lower life satisfaction, long commute lengths are related to an increased sense of time pressure.
     
    “Some people may enjoy a commute but overall, longer travel time is linked to feelings of time crunch which can increase stress levels,” Hilbrecht said.
     
    Lengthy commutes have already been linked to poor mental and physical health, including hypertension, obesity, low-energy and illness-related work absences.
     
    Beyond bad traffic, the researchers found one other factor to be highly correlated with commuters' life satisfaction: physical activity.
     
    “We learned that commuters who had time for physical leisure had higher life satisfaction. Physical activity can mitigate commuting-related stress if workers can include it in their daily routines, but the obvious constraint is time scarcity,” the authors stated. 
     
    Longer commutes mean less time for other activities which leads to lower life satisfaction.
     
    Other factors linked to higher life satisfaction among commuters include flexible work hours and a higher household income, the authors said. 
     
    The study appeared in World Leisure Journal.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Review: Rock ‘N’ Roll musical, Red Rock Diner

    Review: Rock ‘N’ Roll musical, Red Rock Diner
    This infectious musical captures the excitement and innocence of the city’s burgeoning rock ‘n’ roll scene.

    Review: Rock ‘N’ Roll musical, Red Rock Diner

    Parental violence affects girls, boys differently

    Parental violence affects girls, boys differently
    Exposure to violent activities such as pushing, choking, slapping or threatening with a gun or knife by parents or a parent's intimate partner can affect ...

    Parental violence affects girls, boys differently

    Artificial intelligence can wipe out human race: Hawking

    Artificial intelligence can wipe out human race: Hawking
    Renowned British theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking has warned that efforts to create artificial intelligence can be a threat to our very existence....

    Artificial intelligence can wipe out human race: Hawking

    Women better at defining casual sex encounters

    Women better at defining casual sex encounters
    Women are better at defining casual sex encounters than men, says a new study, adding that this is because such sexual encounters put women in...

    Women better at defining casual sex encounters

    Boys more relationally aggressive than girls

    Boys more relationally aggressive than girls
    Contrary to popular belief, tactics such as spreading malicious rumours, social exclusion and rejection to harm or manipulate others are used more often by boys...

    Boys more relationally aggressive than girls

    Why kids do not pay heed to their parents' criticism

    Why kids do not pay heed to their parents' criticism
    The adolescents lay in the brain imaging scanner as they listened to two 30-second clips of their own mothers criticising them, wired.com reported....

    Why kids do not pay heed to their parents' criticism

    PrevNext