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GT Weeks Doomworld Forum Staple Took the Dumb Test – Results were inconclusive Broke a sheep with a hammer once, swore he never would again
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Sleep Deprivation in the Workplace
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Outline Problem Solution Benefits Customer Competition Potential Drawbacks
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Problem Many people in the workplace are sleep deprived.
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Why it’s a problem Driving and operating machinery while sleep deprived is dangerous. Sleep deprived workers are less productive.
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Why it’s a problem Survey published in Journal of Occupational & Environmental Medicine found that “fatigue- related productivity losses were estimated to cost $1967/employee annually” Among the four companies surveyed, “sleep- related reductions in productivity cost $54 million a year.”
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Why it’s a problem Sleep deprivation is said to be at least partly responsible for several famous accidents, such as the Exxon Valdez oil spill and the Three Mile Island nuclear plant accident. gliving.com
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Solution Use a sleep monitoring device to monitor employee sleep. – Device sends sleep data to central system for analysis. – Data is used to chart out relationship between sleep patterns and employee productivity. – System creates enforceable sleep plans for employees.
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Benefits More focused and prolific work Fewer accidents Save on health care costs for employees
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Customer Employers who want their employees at their cheapest and best Could also be used in sleep studies, more accurate than a survey
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Competition Zeo is a personal sleep coach that tracks sleep throughout the night with a headband. Our product will track sleep in a similar way but will be the only product to be used in corporate study and analysis and to enforce a sleep schedule on employees.
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Potential Drawbacks Employee resistance to plan Privacy issues Hard to prevent fraud High cost of equipment
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References Journal of Occupational & Environmental Medicine: January 2010 - Volume 52 - Issue 1 - pp 91-98 Leslie, M. (1999, September 28). Sleep deprivation shown to have as much impact on reaction time as alcohol. Retrieved from http://med.stanford.edu/news_releases/1999/sepreleases/reaction.html Skerrett, P.J. (2011, January 12). Sleep deprivation's true workplace costs. Retrieved from http://blogs.hbr.org/your-health-at- work/2011/01/sleep-deprivations-true-workpl.html Walter, L. (2008, May 5). Combating workplace sleep deprivation. Retrieved from http://ehstoday.com/safety/ehs_imp_80170/ Zeo Inc. (2011). Zeo personal sleep coach. Retrieved from www.myzeo.com
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