Science says so.
If you work in an office, at some point you’ve probably about how much switching off email has changed their life. Turns out, they’re right.
Checking email from a hammock probably makes you less stressed too, but scientists haven’t studied that yet. Getty Images/iStockphoto gpointstudio
New research published in the journal Computers in Human Behaviour has found that checking email less frequently reduces stress. There’s tons of anecdotal evidence that switching email off for long periods helps you to get stuff done and stress less at work, but now this scientific study backs that up.
Over a hundred people participated in the two-week study. The researchers write:
During one week, 124 adults were randomly assigned to limit checking their email to three times a day; during the other week, participants could check their email an unlimited number of times per day. We found that during the limited email use week, participants experienced significantly lower daily stress than during the unlimited email use week.
Lower stress levels meant that study participants rated higher on a lot of measures of well-being.
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People who checked their emails less often felt less distracted too. Basically, less email means less stress means that you feel better.
In 2012 researchers at the University of California, Irvine, presented work at a conference showing that taking five-day breaks from email meant workers experienced less stress and multitasked less. But while five-day breaks from email are not very practical, checking less often is something many people could achieve – though, as anyone who’s tried before knows, it might not be as easy as it sounds.
Lead author of the new study, Kostadin Kushlev of the University of British Columbia, said in a statement:
Most participants in our study found it quite difficult to check their email only a few times a day. This is what makes our obvious-in-hindsight findings so striking: People find it difficult to resist the temptation of checking email, and yet resisting this temptation reduces their stress.
Kushlev says he now checks his email less and feels better for it:
I now check my email in chunks several times a day, rather than constantly responding to messages as they come in. And I feel better and less stressed.
So close that Gmail tab and put your phone away during your lunch break – you’ll thank yourself for it.
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