No Image Available

John Sylvester

P&MM

Divisional Managing Director

LinkedIn
Email
Pocket
Facebook
WhatsApp

Blog: Are your staff getting enough shuteye?

pp_default1

For many of us pressing the snooze button on our alarms has become part of our daily routine and taking your laptop home alongside that extra pile of paperwork has become something of the norm.

But do we actually realise the negative impact this is having on our productivity in the workplace?
 
‘Chronic lack of sleep affects 1 in 3 British workers’
 
A recent article in The Guardian highlighted the need for both employers and employees to stop and take note. Dennis Cambell argues that the combination of computers, stress and taking work home are all to blame for an increase in the number of sleep-deprived workers.
 
A 2012 study of more than 38,700 UK workers from a variety of industries found that only 38.5% are having the recommended 7-8 hrs sleep a night, whilst 45% of UK workers struggle to maintain 5-7 hrs a night.
 
Of the 1 in 3 workers who have a chronic lack of sleep 80% of these individuals would be diagnosed with a sleep disorder by their GP. With shocking stats like these it is no wonder the UK are near the top of the international league table for our lack of sleep.
 
“British employers should be very worried about these findings as organisations that have employees that sleep better perform better in the marketplace,” Medical Director, Tony Massey.
 
Supporting Cambells’ argument, US journalist Leo Wildrich highlighted the fact that many US workers are partial to bringing work home with them and not getting enough shuteye. Wildrich acknowledged the common turn of phrase used by many sleep deprived workers… ‘I can run better on no sleep’, but think again!
 
Yes it is true that a person who sleeps for 4 hrs a night can appear to be equally attentive and alert as someone who slept 7.5 hrs first thing in the morning. However the problem lies once that sleep deprived worker loses focus later in the day. Their brain struggles to regain focus and the individual loses concentration and attentiveness.
 
Harvard scientist Clifford Saper states that “the main finding is that the brain of the sleep-deprived individual is working normally sometimes, but intermittently suffers from something akin to power failure”.
 
Are your employees getting up on the wrong side of the bed?
 
Cambell also highlights the fact that (according to their study) happy employees get the best sleep. Individuals who said they were ‘very satisfied’ with their job got the best scores in the sleep categories.
 
It appears from both articles that there is an increasing number of workers globally who do not know how to switch off their ‘work mode’ and are suffering the effects from sleep deprivation as a result (some without even realising it).
 
Both employers and employees alike need to improve the amount and quality of sleep they are getting in order to maintain efficiency, engagement and innovativeness in the workplace. If your office is starting to look like a scene from the movie ‘Shaun of the Dead’ try and ensure that you and your colleagues catch fourty winks!
 
 
John Sylvester is divisional managing director at marketing services agency, P&MM.

We really welcome any and all contributions from the community, so please feel free to share your views and opinions with us, your colleagues and peers via our blogs section.

Want more insight like this? 

Get the best of people-focused HR content delivered to your inbox.
No Image Available
John Sylvester

Divisional Managing Director

Read more from John Sylvester