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Job stress costs women their health
Feeling stressed at work may be making you sicker than you ever imagined. Read what the experts sayWhen women have jobs that are high in stress but low in levels of control, their health can be thrown into a state of decline, according to a recent study.
A study published in the British Medical Journal claims that job-induced stress can take a serious toll on a woman's physical and mental health. The study, which spanned the course of many years, focused on more than 21,000 female nurses in relatively good health. Researchers discovered that when women work in a high-pressure environment where they have little control over their work and no social support system, their health-related quality of life can be drastically impaired. On the other hand, women with lower-demand jobs and higher levels of control over their duties were shown to have better health. The researchers also discovered that having someone to talk to about problems at work is beneficial, and that the health of all women in the study was improved by having a social support network in the workplace.
Being overloaded with tasks or having minimal control over the amount of work you perform and the timeframe in which it must be completed, may cause you to experience feelings of frustration or unhappiness. The result? Your body produces stress hormones. Stress hormones are typically released when an individual experiences psychological distress, and they negatively affect the body and its organs. Stress increases your susceptibility to heart disease, high blood pressure, depression and bodily pain, and strikes a blow to the overall health of women everywhere.
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