Skip to main content
Secondary navigation
About us
Opportunities
Subscribe
Toggle navigation
Main navigation
Our Research
Working conditions & health
Vulnerability at work
Workplace OHS programs & practices
OHS regulation & enforcement
Clinical treatment & health measurement
Workplace disability management
Compensation & benefit policy
Selected topics
Project directory
Our People
Scientists
Executive team
Board of Directors
Scientific Advisory Committee
Adjunct scientists
Partner organizations
Staff directory
How We Work
Systematic Review Program
Knowledge transfer & exchange
Research impact
Publications & Resources
Newsletters
Plain-language summaries
Tools & guides
Impact case studies
What researchers mean by...
Videos & presentations
Scientific reports
Journal articles
Corporate reports
Document directory
News & Events
Events
What's new
Media room
IWH in the media
IWH News archive
Secondary navigation
About us
Opportunities
Subscribe
Search
IWH in the media
Working overtime could raise women's diabetes risk
Working lots of overtime may get you appreciation from the boss, but it might be bad for your health, writes Serena Gordon of U.S. News & World Report, about a new IWH study
Media outlet
U.S. News & World Report
Date published
Monday, July 2, 2018
Link to source
https://health.usnews.com/health-care/articles/2018-07-02/working-overtime-could-raise-womens-diabetes-risk