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Does remote work endanger your mental health?

Gleb Tsipursky serves as the CEO of the hybrid work consultancyDisaster Avoidance Experts.

While flexibility in work arrangements has been praised for allowing employees to avoid long commutes and manage work-life balance more effectively, skeptics argue that such arrangements lead to increased feelings of isolation and blurred work-life boundaries.

Groundbreaking research conducted by University of Pittsburgh Professor Mark Ma and his graduate student Yuye Ding provides actual data-based insights on whether flexibility is actually good or bad for mental health.

According to a 2022 U.S. Chamber of Commerce survey of 403 executives, 64% of executives said that remote work had anywhere from a major to a minor negative impact on their employees’ mental health, up from 55% saying that in 2021.

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