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HEADACHES
IN THE WORKPLACE COSTS COMPANIES BILLIONS OF DOLLARS IN LOST WORK
PRODUCTIVITY
Migraine
headaches costs American businesses between $5.6 and $17.2 billion
in lost work productivity a year. A recent national survey of working
women
with migraine conducted by the National Headache Foundation (NHF)
revealed
that 89% suffer migraine attacks while at work. 41% cite workplace
stress as
their most common headache trigger, 61% say their headaches become
so severe
they are forced to take time off work, and nearly 80% report lost
productivity overall.
The
survey of working women migraineurs also revealed that more than
half
(55%) report that migraines affect their ability to function at
work, 37%
report home and family responsibilities being compromised, and,
among those
who travel for business, half (53%) experience migraines while traveling
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potentially rendering business trips less productive.1
"The
economic burden of headache is staggering," says Lawrence C.
Newman,
M.D., director, Headache Institute, at St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital
in New
York City. "More work time is lost due to headaches than to
cancer, heart
disease and mental illness combined. We need to pro-actively identify
headache sufferers in the workplace and offer them opportunities
for correct
diagnosis and treatment. Employers can significantly reduce the
health-care
related costs associated with headaches. It is far less expensive
to treat
migraine correctly than to under treat it."
"Primary
headache disorders are a common condition responsible for
extracting an enormous toll on the sufferer, his or her family,
friends, and
co-workers as well as society as a whole," continues Dr. Newman.
"Many
patients never consult a physician; others have lapsed from care
because of
mis-diagnosis or ineffective treatment."
Lawrence
C. Newman, M.D., is director of The Headache Institute at Saint
Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center. He is an attending neurologist
at Beth
Israel Medical Center and Montefiore Medical Center and an associate
professor of clinical neurology at the Albert Einstein College of
Medicine.
Board certified in Neurology, Dr. Newman is the first in the nation
to have
completed a formal fellowship in headache, and has trained several
neurologist in the sub-specialty of headache.
Visit Dr. Newman's web-site at www.nyheadachedoctor.com
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