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New CareerBuilder
Survey Finds the Economy May be
Making Workers Healthier
Workers Share
Details of Their Lunch and Smoke
Break Routines
CHICAGO,
July 8, 2010 - The
resounding effects of the
economic downturn have some
workers making healthier choices
when it comes to lunch breaks
and smoking habits during the
work day. According to a new
CareerBuilder survey, 47 percent
of workers report they have been
packing a lunch more often to
eat healthier or help save
money. When it comes to smoking
habits, 44 percent of workers
who smoke said they are more
likely to quit smoking given
today’s economic conditions. In
addition, one-in-five said that
they have decreased the number
of times they smoke during the
work day (21 percent) or
actually quit altogether (20
percent). The CareerBuilder
survey was conducted among more
than 4,400 workers between May
18 and June 3, 2010.
"Economic stress over the last
year has caused some workers to
reflect on their habits, and
many of them have turned to
healthier routines," said
Rosemary Haefner, vice president
of human resources for
CareerBuilder. "In addition to
helping cut personal costs,
employees who limit their
smoking and lunching out habits
are taking better care of their
overall health. This type of
‘better-for-you’ behavior can be
encouraged by companies who
implement wellness programs,
healthy living challenges or
smoking cessation support."
While some workers are
embracing healthier habits,
heavier workloads and added
stress associated with downsized
operations may have other
workers taking a different
direction.
Lunch breaks
Taking
the time to recharge during the
work day can be a challenge for
some workers. Nearly one-third
(32 percent) report they take
less than a half hour for lunch,
while 5 percent take less than
15 minutes. One-in-ten never
take a lunch break and 16
percent report they work right
through their lunch hour. Nearly
one-in-five (18 percent)
typically don't leave their
desks during their lunch break
and eat in their workspace 5
days a week.
As some workers struggle to
fit in break time during the
day, others choose to multitask
on their lunch hour, using their
breaks for the following
activities:
Hanging out with
co-workers - 23 percent
Running errands - 18
percent
Doing work - 16
percent
Walking - 10 percent
Shopping - 7 percent
Working out - 3
percent
Smoke breaks
Of
workers who smoke, 78 percent of
them said they take up to ten
minutes for each of their smoke
breaks a day. Seven-in-ten (70
percent) report they take up to
3 smoke breaks a day, while 12
percent take more than five
smoke breaks in a work day.
Survey
Methodology
This survey was conducted online
within the U.S. by Harris
Interactive© on behalf of
CareerBuilder.com among 4,498
U.S. workers (employed
full-time; not self-employed;
non government); ages 18 and
over between May 18 and June 3,
2010 (percentages for some
questions are based on a subset
of U.S. Employees, based on
their responses to certain
questions). With a pure
probability sample of 4,498 one
could say with a 95 percent
probability that the overall
results have a sampling error of
+/- 1.46 percentage points.
Sampling error for data from
sub-samples is higher and
varies.
About
CareerBuilder®
CareerBuilder is the global
leader in human capital
solutions, helping companies
target and attract their most
important asset - their people.
Its online career site,
CareerBuilder.com®, is the
largest in the United States
with more than 23 million unique
visitors, 1 million jobs and 32
million resumes. CareerBuilder
works with the world’s top
employers, providing resources
for everything from employment
branding and data analysis to
recruitment support. More than
9,000 websites, including 140
newspapers and broadband portals
such as MSN and AOL, feature
CareerBuilder’s proprietary job
search technology on their
career sites. Owned by Gannett
Co., Inc. (NYSE:GCI), Tribune
Company, The McClatchy Company
(NYSE:MNI) and Microsoft Corp.
(Nasdaq: MSFT), CareerBuilder
and its subsidiaries operate in
the United States, Europe,
Canada and Asia. For more
information, visit
www.careerbuilder.com. |