Working long hours? It could be altering the structure of your brain, new study says
Long working hours might not just be bad for you, they could also be altering the structure of your brain, a new study suggests.
The research, published Tuesday, found 'significant changes' in the brains of people who were overworking, which is a combination of physical and emotional overexertion, as well as a lack of rest.
The research was conducted by two scientists at South Korea's Chung-Ang University and Yonsei University, who followed 110 healthcare workers classified into 'overworked' and 'non-overworked' groups.
In South Korea, where 52 hours of work per week is the legal upper limit, overworking has become a public health concern.
The overworked group, clocking 52 hours or more each week, consisted of 32 people who were on average younger, in employment for less time and more highly educated in comparison to those working standard hours.
By comparing data from a different study and MRI scans, the researchers were able to use a neuroimaging technique to analyse the workers' brain volume.
The technique allowed them to identify and compare differences in levels of gray matter in different regions of the brain, while the application of atlas-based analysis meant they could identify and label structures in brain scans.
'People who worked 52 or more hours a week displayed significant changes in brain regions associated with executive function and emotional regulation, unlike participants who worked standard hours,' researchers said in a press release.
Areas of the brain that showed an increase in volume include the middle frontal gyrus, which plays a major role in cognitive functions, attention, memory and language-related processes, as well as the insula, which is involved in emotional processing, self-awareness and understanding social context.
Researchers believe their findings suggest a 'potential relationship' between having an increased workload and changes in these parts of the brain, providing a biological basis for the cognitive and emotional challenges reported by people who are overworked.
Joon Yul Choi, coauthor of the study and an assistant professor at Yonsei University's Department of Biomedical Engineering, told CNN that these changes might be 'at least in part, reversible' if environmental stressors are reversed. Still, returning to your brain's baseline state could take much longer.
Previous research has also found evidence of the negative health impacts of long working hours. In 2021, joint research from the International Labour Organization (ILO) and the World Health Organization (WHO) estimated that overworking led to more than 745,000 deaths in a year. Long hours have also been found to raise the risk of diabetes in women and contribute to a decline in cognitive ability.
While these behavioral and psychological consequences of overwork are well-known, the underlying neurological mechanisms and changes in anatomy are less understood, the study explained.
Frank Pega, who led the WHO-ILO 2021 study, told CNN that these latest findings constitute 'important new evidence' that could help better understand how long working hours 'radically' impact the physical health of workers.
Pega, a WHO technical officer who was not involved in this latest study, said the research supports WHO-ILO's findings that 'long working hours contribute the largest burden of disease of all occupational risk factors identified so far.'
However, the study's small sample size and focus only on healthcare workers in South Korea makes it hard to generalize its results. 'More studies in different populations are needed,' said Pega.
'While the results should be interpreted cautiously due to the exploratory nature of this pilot study, they represent a meaningful first step in understanding the relationship between overwork and brain health,' said the researchers.
As for anyone stuck working long hours? Now you might have a scientific basis to cut down on your time at work.
'Governments, employers, and workers can all take actions to protect workers' health from long working hours,' advised Pega, citing laws, regulations and policies that can ensure healthy work hours.
'The results underscore the importance of addressing overwork as an occupational health concern,' said the study's authors.
Jonny Gifford, principal research fellow at the Institute for Employment Studies in Brighton, England, who was not involved in the study, told CNN that the research 'confirms some physiological reasons that working long hours affects our wellbeing.'
'The use of brain scanning equipment to give neurological explanations gives powerful new evidence linking overwork with structural changes in parts of the brain involved in executive function and emotional regulation,' he said.
'It's a small study of 110 healthcare workers in Korea, but because it is based on robust neurological measures and concerns fundamental mechanisms (overwork and fatigue) that can affect anyone, the central findings are widely relevant,' Gifford added.
The study was published in the journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine.
CNN's Jack Guy contributed to this report.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
The Beverly Hills Skin Whisperer: Jennifer Gerace's Emmy-Ready Revolution
The Beverly Hills Skin Whisperer: Jennifer Gerace's Emmy-Ready Revolution originally appeared on L.A. Mag. If you want to understand Jennifer Gerace, start with what she's not: just another Beverly Hills esthetician with a fancy title. When celebrities call her the "Beverly Hills Skincare Muse"—a nickname that stuck after a client's wife used it—they're acknowledging something the beauty industry's most discerning clients have discovered: Gerace isn't following trends but creating a town where looking camera-ready isn't just vanity but also career currency, Emmy season is skin season. And nobody navigates the high-stakes world of pre-awards skincare like Gerace.L.A. is a city that worships innovation almost as much as it fears aging, and Gerace has mastered both. After years working behind the scenes—14 years as a makeup artist for CNN in D.C., consulting for plastic surgeons, working for Hydra Facial—she noticed a critical gap in the market. "People were just doing whatever the guy next door was doing," she says with characteristic bluntness. "I was able to see everything they were doing wrong."Gerace pioneered bringing exosomes—derived from human tissue and able to "trick your skin into behaving like you're 22"—into her treatments. It's this scientific rigor, coupled with results that speak for themselves, that has celebrities booking months in advance. But it's her work with plasma technology that truly puts her in a category of her own. "Plasma has been around for decades, but it's really just starting to come to the US within the last five years," she explains. Unlike light-based treatments that can trigger hyperpigmentation, her ionic plasma delivers what she calls a "manufactured lightning strike" that vaporizes tissue and kills bacteria without risking technology is so coveted that one Saudi family flew her to Dubai to install all her equipment in their home and train their in-house staff. "They've been scarred by lasers," Gerace explains. "They wanted something they couldn't find anywhere else."For all her technical expertise, it's perhaps Gerace's adaptability that makes her truly indispensable to her clients. She works appointment-only, all hours—sometimes starting at 7 a.m. for clients catching early flights. One client flies in from Boston three times a year for head-to-toe plasma treatments that take three those panicking with just weeks before a big event, Gerace has solutions: "If I have 30 days, I'm going to probably micro-needle twice... If I have a little more than a month, I'm probably going to do plasma, because it's just a better treatment." Her latest innovation? Electromagnetic stimulation, which finds nerve branches and creates intense muscle contractions. "You could never do that on your own," she says of the technique that temporarily reconstructs facial contours without filler. "It's like doing little reps in the face."Gerace doesn't need a storefront on Rodeo Drive or a reality show to build her clientele. She operates entirely by word of mouth, treating entire "friend circles and operations of family members... granddaughters, grandkids, mother, sister, grandmother."In an industry where celebrity endorsements are currency, clients like Bella Thorne and Noah Cyrus speak volumes. Gerace's no-nonsense approach strips away the flowery language of beauty marketing to deliver the real thing: results that stand up to Hollywood's harshest spotlights. For Emmy nominees (and the rest of us), that might be the most valuable red carpet accessory of all. This story was originally reported by L.A. Mag on Jun 5, 2025, where it first appeared.
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
WVU Medicine Princeton Community Hospital breaks ground on PCH Bluefield campus
BLUEFIELD, WV (WVNS) – WVU Medicine continues to expand with the breaking of ground for the new Bluefield campus of Princeton Community Hospital. Located on Southview Drive, the $25 million facility will offer state-of-the-art care to residents in the area. The location will be home to the Bluefield Emergency Department and PCH Behavioral Health Center, and the expansion itself is part of an effort by WVU Medicine to offer comprehensive access and care to patients no matter where they are in the state, according to Princeton Community Hospital President and CEO, Karen Bowling.'One reason WVU Medicine has expanded is we want to make sure we are serving the entire community and that it is a comprehensive level of care,' she said. 'If you think about it, we're on the same medical record. Whether you're in Princeton or you're in Bluefield, whether you need to go to Ruby to have a bone marrow transplant – we're all on the same medical record.'Bowling said the expansion is about communities, families, and serving the region as well as the state. 'As someone who grew up in this region, I know firsthand how much this investment means,' she continued. 'This project is about more than bricks and mortar; it's about giving our families, friends, and neighbors access to the kind of care they deserve, right here at home. WVU Medicine is making a promise to this region, and I'm proud to be part of delivering on that promise.' WVU Medicine President & CEO, Albert Wright reiterated the importance of widespread coverage under a single umbrella as it pertains to patient care. 'This project exemplifies WVU Medicine's unwavering investment in delivering high-quality, accessible care to West Virginians,' he said. 'By expanding services and upgrading facilities, like here at the Bluefield Campus, we're not only enhancing patient care, but we're also reinforcing our long-term commitment to advancing health outcomes in southern West Virginia.'Features of the Bluefield campus will include: The new emergency department (ED) will include: 20 exam rooms, including two rooms designed for psychiatric intake Two resuscitation rooms and two triage rooms OB-ready and trauma rooms Centralized care team support stations Dedicated patient and ambulance entrances Diagnostic Radiology — two radiology rooms Computed Tomography (CT) — one CT scanner Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) — one MRI scanner (a new service for Bluefield) Ultrasound — two ultrasound rooms (a new service for Bluefield) Guest speakers and live music were part of the groundbreaking celebration as guests got their first look at plans for the new facility. PCH plans to officially open the doors to its Bluefield campus in the Fall of 2027, as the provider hopes to further extend the scope of patient accessibility and care. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Yahoo
Biden's White House physician subpoenaed for deposition by House Oversight Chair
House Oversight Chair James Comer has subpoenaed former President Joe Biden's White House physician to appear for a deposition later this month, according to a copy of the subpoena letter shared with CNN. The subpoena to Dr. Kevin O'Connor marks an escalation of the Republican chairman's probe into Biden's mental fitness and decline. In the subpoena letter, Comer said O'Connor was not complying with the committee's initial voluntary request for a transcribed interview. The letter from Comer states that counsel for O'Connor responded to the committee's request for testimony, saying that the physician can't appear for the requested interview, citing legal and ethical obligations as well as 'physician-patient privilege.' The letter from Comer says that 'these arguments lack merit.' CNN has reached out to O'Connor for comment. The subpoena comes as President Donald Trump ordered an investigation into Biden's actions and autopen use in a Wednesday memorandum that cites his predecessor's 'cognitive decline.' Biden dismissed the suggestions in Trump's memo, saying in a statement Wednesday evening, 'Let me be clear: I made the decisions during my presidency. I made the decisions about the pardons, executive orders, legislation, and proclamations. Any suggestion that I didn't is ridiculous and false.' The former president went on to call his successor's executive action a 'distraction.' Comer has ramped up his investigation into Biden's mental fitness in recent days, requesting interviews with nearly a dozen former key aides. CNN's Arlette Saenz contributed to this report.