Results 271 to 280 of about 45,504 (316)
"The Growth in Work Time and the Implications for Macro Policy" [PDF]
Barry Bluestone, Stephen Rose
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1977
Overwork, ie, working beyond one's endurance and recuperative capacities, may be a hazard in certain personality types engaged in open-ended occupations. Some persons appear to lack an inner "governor" and for various reasons ignore the commonplace signs that inform one of the need for rest or recreation.
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Overwork, ie, working beyond one's endurance and recuperative capacities, may be a hazard in certain personality types engaged in open-ended occupations. Some persons appear to lack an inner "governor" and for various reasons ignore the commonplace signs that inform one of the need for rest or recreation.
openaire +4 more sources
Overworked Individuals or Overworked Families?
Work and Occupations, 2001Although debates over the growth of work-family conflict tend to center on the experiences of employed parents and dual-earner couples, analyses of trends in working time typically focus on individual workers. We reexamine the debates regarding the growth of working versus leisure time and then analyze trends in working time by focusing on the ...
JERRY A. JACOBS, KATHLEEN GERSON
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Professionalism, Altruism, and Overwork
Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 1988The author contends that overworking residents cannot be ethically justified. There is evidence that overwork is detrimental both to the resident and to the patient. In addition, the argument that working long hours is essential to maintain medicine's status as a profession is analyzed.
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