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Health & Fitness

What Happened to the Old Lonely Phone?

Could we be paying a price for being available 24/7?

By Brenda Stockdale, a Contributor to Colleen's Blog 

 

I like to think it wasn’t that long ago when the phone rang “lonely in the house” as Louis CK puts it. I realize now that as a teenager I must have missed calls. Imagine that. If sick at school I waited at the nurses station until my mom came home and happened to answer the phone. Today, parents can be reached while navigating traffic on a 12-lane interstate at 70 mph and surfing their iTunes playlist. Welcome, ladies and gentlemen, to multitasking in the 21st century!

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But neuroscientists are concerned; our nervous system isn’t “in sync” with the constant interruptions and experts can’t predict the long-term effects of being on call 24/7. The evidence we do have though, is a clarion call to reevaluate our response to the demands of technology.

For starters, multitasking has been shown to be far less effective than we think; it takes longer to get it all done and we make more mistakes in the process. We text while we’re walking down the street (legislation in some states is being considered due to the uptick in pedestrians being hit by cars) at a movie or even while talking to someone else. In the workplace interruptions from cell phones, texts and coworkers are cutting into not only our efficiency but our creative problem solving ability as well. But nowhere is the high cost of multitasking more evident than in highway safety data where talking on a cell while driving can be as hazardous as drinking alcohol.

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It turns out it could be just as costly when multitasking at your desk. Doing too much, too fast, too often is bad for your brain. Multitasking drives up stress hormones which act as battery acid on the memory center of the brain and promotes system wide inflammation.  Slowing down with a few deep breaths and focusing on one task at a time keeps us productive and calm, lowers cortisol and can even boost our mood.

Easier said than done. 62% of employees say their workload has increased over the last six months and 53% report their work leaves them tired and overwhelmed. It’s not just a mental thing; workplace stress costs more than $300 billion (that’s right–billion!) each year (according to the American Institute of Stress in New York). Collectively, stressed workers’ health care costs are 46% higher than other employees. (And we’ll skip the stats on cardiovascular disease and cancer.)

Not surprisingly “lack of vacations” has emerged as a predictor of heart attack and death–according to a 20-year investigation after adjusting for factors such as age and anger, along with variables like cholesterol, smoking, and weight. And if that isn’t enough this next study will send you running to your travel agent: For ”middle-aged men increased frequency of annual vacations is associated with a reduction in deaths from any cause. Those who took regular vacations were 20% less likely to die than those who skipped vacations, and 30% less likely to die of heart disease.”

But jet setting to the Caribbean may not save you if you’re still multitasking. All in all it could be one reason why 60% of responders to a USA Today survey report vacations aren’t as rejuvenating as they used to be. This could be because, as reported in a related survey, more than half of U.S. employees will check emails and take phone calls during their vacation. But many of us (self-included) check email multiple times throughout the day without giving it a thought and probably wouldn’t even consider it ‘multitasking.’ That may not be a good thing.

A small but intriguing study released by the University of California found checking email regularly reduced productivity and increased stress (as detected by heart rate monitors). The results prompted the authors to suggest companies batch emails once or twice a day rather than ding-donging employees every few minutes. They also recommend taking “e-mail vacations.” (When subjects avoided email over a five-day period stress levels went down.)

As a recent guest on talk radio’s The Weekly Check-Up I was asked, “Yes or no, do you check email on vacation?” Until this study the answer was ‘yes.’ But as an experiment I recently left my cell phone home alone. On the 19-hour journey by plane, boat, and automobile we arrived at the Pacific Rim National Park. For seven days my husband said every time I wasn’t playing in a tidal pool, tracking the flight of bald eagles or a pod of orcas I was asleep. I slept on benches, curbs, on my husband’s shoulder and flat out on a dock at one point. All time I would previously have spent responding to email.

I’m not suggesting that you sleep through half your vacation but for someone who doesn’t nap it was a novel experience. And one I chose to bring home with me. Since then I’m making changes in how I manage technology and I’m polling friends, family and clients about how it feels to know someone can reach out and touch you 24/7. While texting may keep tabs on your teen what about the implied need to respond to whoever whenever? What are you doing to be in control of technology rather than technology controlling you? Do you feel guilty when not checking? What advice do you have for others?

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Photo compliments of freedigitalphotos.net.

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