Five-Minute Hourly Breaks Best for Office Worker Wellbeing, Study Finds
Auf einen Blick
- A new study suggests that five-minute "movement snacks" every hour are the most effective way for office workers to improve wellbeing and productivity without disruption.
- Researchers found this approach boosted mood and reduced fatigue better than breaks every half hour or two hours.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Warum es wichtig ist
Prolonged sitting is linked to increased health risks like obesity, heart disease, and type 2 diabetes. Finding a balance between productivity and movement during the workday is a challenge.
Whether it's responding to emails or taking video calls, so much of office life revolves around being planted on a chair.
But the habit is damaging our health. Prolonged sitting can increase the risk, external of being overweight and developing heart disease and type 2 diabetes, say experts.
While we know screen breaks are good for us, what's less clear is how often we should get up and move about while remaining productive at work.
A new study, external published by the British Journal of Sports Medicine has found that taking five-minute breaks - or "movement snacks" - every hour is the best and most feasible way to boost wellbeing without losing efficiency.
Lead researcher Keith Diaz told BBC News that most adults now spend three-quarters of their waking day sedentary.
While general advice to "sit less and move more" is correct, people need to know what dose, he added.
"The good news is that a walk break every hour for five minutes is enough to improve mood and lower fatigue. And people found this realistic and attainable," Diaz said.
The study by Columbia University surveyed more than 11,000 US employees - most of them in office jobs and working eight- to nine-hour shifts.
For the first week, they went about their usual routine and completed daily surveys about tiredness, their mood, and work performance.
For the following two weeks they were asked to take walking breaks at work of five minutes every half hour, every hour or every two hours and fill out similar surveys.
A walk every half hour was beneficial for mood and reducing tiredness, but was disruptive to the day job. One every two hours was better than no walking, but researchers found a five-minute stroll each hour led to the biggest and most feasible improvement in productivity, mood and alertness.
Offene Fragen
- What are the long-term effects of hourly movement snacks?
- Can this be applied to non-office jobs?






