The Key To Happiness: Work
By Dave Reynolds,
Inclusion Daily Express
September 18, 2006
CARDIFF, WALES--I'm going
to tell you something now that you already knew: It is better to have a job
than to not have a job.
But you don't have to take my word for it.
Just listen to Professor Mansel Aylward, Director of Cardiff
University's Centre for Psychosocial and Disability Research.
"The evidence is quite compelling that being at work is good for
happiness and is also good for health."
Last Thursday, Aylward spoke about his analysis of data from the Office
of National Statistics showing a strong connection between employment, income
and emotional and physical well-being.
"There is a positive link between the feeling of happiness and level of
health, so being out of work is very dangerous," he said. "If you look at the
suicide rate of young adult males, it is 40 times greater for those out of work
than those who have a job -- that is a figure we can't neglect."
"Even if we look at the whole spectrum, people out of work are six times
more likely to commit suicide than those in work."
Aylward found that medical conditions such as heart disease, diabetes
and cancer are higher for unemployed individuals. He concluded that being out
of work for six months can carry the same health risks as smoking 20 packs of
cigarettes a day.
Aylward said that even if you don't like your job for one reason or
another, it's likely you have a social network of colleagues there, and that
you feel that you are doing something important.
And even though many of us say we want to win the lottery so we can quit
work and be happy, Aylward said his research shows that lottery winners are
happier right after winning the lottery, but that their happiness levels soon
come back to where they were before they won. The same thing happens for people
who experience a life-changing event, such as a car accident, he said.
"People who have won the lottery and people who have had serious
accidents, that leave them paraplegic for example, do have very different
levels of happiness immediately afterwards, but after several months, their
levels of happiness return to a similar level as those before the event."
Related:
Working 'makes us
happy (The Evening Standard)
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Reproduced here under special arrangement
with Inclusion Daily Express international disability rights news service.
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