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Letter
Working from home in the time of COVID-19: how to best preserve occupational health?
  1. Hanifa Bouziri1,
  2. David R M Smith1,2,
  3. Alexis Descatha3,
  4. William Dab1,
  5. Kevin Jean1
  1. 1 Laboratoire MESuRS, Conservatoire national des Arts et Métiers, Paris, France
  2. 2 Laboratoire Épidémiologie et modélisation de l'Échappement aux Antibiotiques, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France
  3. 3 Occupational Health Unit-UMS 011 U1168, Université de Versailles St-Quentin-Inserm APHP, Paris, France
  1. Correspondence to Hanifa Bouziri, Laboratoire MESuRS, Conservatoire national des Arts et Métiers, Paris, France; hanifa.bouziri{at}lecnam.net

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In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, many countries have adopted a broad spectrum of containment measures, from recommendations to stay at home to quarantines of large geographic regions. As part of this response, corporations and governments alike have strongly encouraged workers to telecommute where possible. More than 3.4 billion people in 84 countries have been confined to their homes, as estimated in late March 2020, which potentially translates to many millions of workers temporarily exposed to telecommuting. Since 2000, the emergence of digital and broadband internet has facilitated the development of home telework. Despite limited research interest on its impact on occupational health, several health benefits and risks of telework have been identified in academic or grey literature (table 1) (for a review see Ref. 1).

Table 1

Health impacts of telework, specificity of pandemic COVID-19-related containment and key prevention measures for employers

Assessing how health risks and benefits of telework are affected by its sudden, large-scale uptake in the context of COVID-19 is key to best preserve occupational health. The current pandemic context carries several specificities. First, the sudden shift to teleworking could not have been anticipated by workers or employers, so the safety of the home working environment has not necessarily been ensured. However, for many the uptake of telework will be temporary, so a limited duration of exposure may mitigate risks of injury or pain associated with the home environment, or risks of musculoskeletal disorders associated with unergonomic workstations.2 Second, in many organisations telework has temporarily switched from the exception to the rule. This may reduce isolation risks associated with social distancing in the workplace setting that teleworkers face in normal times. Conversely, widespread school closures have forced many parents to telework and mind their children at the same time, including having to plan for schooling at home or online. These overlapping responsibilities amplify psychosocial risks associated with unstructured working time.3 Third, the current uptake of telework has occurred in an anxiety-provoking context linked to the pandemic. This is likely to worsen telework-associated psychosocial and behavioural risks, especially those associated with addictions. Among workers with psychological frailties, isolation may also lead to decompensation with more difficult psychiatric care. Taken together, these suggest that the COVID-19 pandemic may exacerbate occupational hazards beyond the more obvious examples of healthcare settings or other jobs on the front line.4

For employers, maximising health benefits of teleworking in times of containment while minimising its negative impacts constitutes a continuity in their duty to preserve the health of their employees. To do so, they should provide key messages specifically tailored to an unanticipated and anxiety-provoking context in which employees may struggle to adapt their homes and lifestyles to telework.5 They should also allow teleconsultations as well as systems for listening to employee complaints with occupational practitioners to provide employees with optimised working conditions despite the pandemic circumstances. Companies are increasingly recognised as an integral player in outbreak management.6 They also have a role to play in minimising the unintended health consequences of outbreak control measures.

References

Footnotes

  • Contributors HB, WD and KJ conducted the literature search and analysis. HB and KJ wrote the first draft of the report and all authors contributed to subsequent revisions.

  • Funding The authors have not declared a specific grant for this research from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

  • Competing interests None declared.

  • Patient consent for publication Not required.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; internally peer reviewed.