Japan has again been forced to confront its work culture after labour inspectors ruled that the death of a 31-year-old journalist at the country’s public broadcaster, NHK, had been caused by overwork.
Miwa Sado, who worked at the broadcaster’s headquarters in Tokyo, logged 159 hours of overtime and took only two days off in the month leading up to her death from heart failure in July 2013.
A labour standards office in Tokyo later attributed her death to karoshi (death from overwork) but her case was only made public by her former employer this week.
Sado’s death is expected to increase pressure on Japanese authorities to address the large number of deaths attributed to the punishingly long hours expected of many employees. Full story...
Related posts:
Miwa Sado, who worked at the broadcaster’s headquarters in Tokyo, logged 159 hours of overtime and took only two days off in the month leading up to her death from heart failure in July 2013.
A labour standards office in Tokyo later attributed her death to karoshi (death from overwork) but her case was only made public by her former employer this week.
Sado’s death is expected to increase pressure on Japanese authorities to address the large number of deaths attributed to the punishingly long hours expected of many employees. Full story...
Related posts:
- Action demanded in South Korea over excessive overtime culture...
- Japan government mulls stopping employees from fatal overworking...
- If you want to earn more, work less...
- Japan firm considers 3-day weekends as nation rethinks culture of long...
- Head of Japan's largest ad agency resigns over 'death by overwork'
- Workplace suicides are sharply on the rise in the globalized economy...
- Filipino trainee’s death in Japan ruled from overwork, a first since 2011...
- Suicide of young Dentsu employee recognized as due to...
- 600,000 Chinese die from overworking each year...
No comments:
Post a Comment