University of Oxford, UK; University of Western Australia, Australia.
Accid Anal Prev. 2017 Feb;99(Pt B):383-388. doi: 10.1016/j.aap.2015.11.022. Epub 2015 Dec 2.
Personnel working on North Sea oil/gas installations are exposed to remote and potentially hazardous environments, and to extended work schedules (typically, 14×12h shifts). Moreover, overtime (additional to the standard 84-h week) is not uncommon among offshore personnel. Evidence from onshore research suggests that long work hours and adverse environmental characteristics are associated with sleep impairments, and consequently with health and safety risks, including accidents and injuries. However, little is known about the extent to which long hours and a demanding work environment combine synergistically in relation to sleep. The present study sought to address this issue, using survey data collected from offshore day-shift personnel (N=551). The multivariate analysis examined the additive and interactive effects of overtime and measures of the psychosocial/physical work environment (job demands, job control, supervisor support, and physical stressors) as predictors of sleep outcomes during offshore work weeks. Control variables, including age and sleep during leave weeks, were also included in the analysis model. Sleep duration and quality were significantly impaired among those who worked overtime (54% of the participants) relative to those who worked only 12-h shifts. A linear relationship was found between long overtime hours and short sleep duration; personnel who worked >33h/week overtime reported <6h/day sleep. Significant interactions were also found; sleep duration was negatively related to job demands, and positively related to supervisor support, only among personnel who worked overtime. Poor sleep quality was predicted by the additive effects of overtime, low support and an adverse physical environment. These findings highlight the need to further examine the potential health and safety consequences of impaired sleep associated with high overtime rates offshore, and to identify the extent to which adverse effects of overtime can be mitigated by favourable physical and psychosocial work environment characteristics.
在北海石油/天然气设施工作的人员面临偏远且潜在危险的环境,以及延长的工作时间表(通常为 14×12 小时轮班)。此外,海上工作人员经常加班(除了标准的 84 小时周工作时间之外)。陆上研究的证据表明,长时间工作和不利的环境特征与睡眠障碍有关,从而与健康和安全风险(包括事故和伤害)相关。然而,对于长时间工作和苛刻的工作环境在多大程度上协同影响睡眠,人们知之甚少。本研究使用从海上白班人员收集的调查数据(N=551),试图解决这个问题。多元分析检查了加班和心理社会/物理工作环境(工作要求、工作控制、主管支持和物理压力源)措施作为预测海上工作周期间睡眠结果的自变量的加性和交互作用。分析模型还包括控制变量,包括年龄和休假周的睡眠。与仅工作 12 小时轮班的人员相比,加班(参与者的 54%)人员的睡眠持续时间和质量明显受损。发现长时间加班与睡眠持续时间短之间存在线性关系;每周加班>33 小时的人员报告每天睡眠<6 小时。还发现了显著的相互作用;仅在加班人员中,睡眠持续时间与工作要求呈负相关,与主管支持呈正相关。睡眠质量差是由加班的附加效应、低支持和不利的物理环境预测的。这些发现强调需要进一步研究与海上高加班率相关的睡眠障碍对健康和安全的潜在影响,并确定加班的不利影响在多大程度上可以通过有利的物理和心理社会工作环境特征来减轻。