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Frequent flyers - The sad, sick life of the business traveller

2015-08-18 10:32:29

Aug 17th 2015, 16:29 by A.W. | WASHINGTON, DC

MANY of us have found ourselves trying to explain to friends and colleagues

that, no, business travel isn t as fun and glamorous as it seems. Finally,

there could be proof to back this up. Researchers at the University of Surrey,

in Britain, and Linnaeus University, in Sweden, have published a new study

highlighting what they call a darker side of hypermobility . The hypermobile

largely but not exclusively business travellers have won a certain cachet in

contemporary society, with the worldliness they seem to acquire from their

travels and the envy-inducing social-media posts they leave in their wake. But,

the researchers warn, whilst aspects of glamorisation in regard to mobility

are omnipresent in our lives, there exists an ominous silence with regard to

its darker side .

The study, which synthesises existing research on the effects of frequent

travel, finds three types of consequence: physiological, psychological and

emotional, and social. The physiological ones are the most obvious. Jet lag is

the affliction travellers know best, although they may not anticipate some of

its direr, if rarer, potential effects, like speeding ageing or increasing the

risk of heart attack and stroke. Then there s the danger of deep-vein

thrombosis, exposure to germs and radiation people who fly more than 85,000

miles a year (say, New York to Seattle and back every three weeks, or New York

to Tokyo and back seven times) exceed the regulatory limit for exposure to

radiation. And finally, of course, business travellers tend to get less

exercise and eat less healthily than people who stay in place.

The psychological and emotional toll of business travel is more abstract, but

just as real. Frequent flyers experience travel disorientation from changing

places and time zones so often. They also suffer mounting stress, given that

time spent travelling will rarely be offset through a reduced workload, and

that there may be anxieties associated with work continuing to accumulate (eg

inbox overload ) whilst away . Due to the absence from family and friends,

hypermobility is frequently an isolating and lonely experience, the authors

write. The accumulated impact can be substantial. One study of 10,000 World

Bank employees found that the business travellers among them were three times

as likely to file psychological insurance claims.

Finally, there are the social effects. Marriages suffer from the time apart, as

does children s behaviour. What is more, relationships tend to become more

unequal, as the partner who stays at home is forced to take on more domestic

duties. There s a gender disparity here, since most business travellers are

men. (A 2011 survey of Asian business travellers by Accor, a hotel firm, found

that 74% were men. Seemingly the last comprehensive research into American

business travellers in 2002 found that 77% were male.) Friendships also fray,

as business travellers often sacrifice local collective activities and instead

prioritise their immediate families when returning from trips .

Of course, these impacts are mitigated by the fact that they fall

disproportionately on a segment of the population that is already doing rather

well. The mobile elite tend to have higher incomes and access to better

health care than the population at large. According to the study, in Sweden, 3%

of the population accounts for a quarter of international travel; in France, 5%

covers half of the population s total distance travelled.

So these may be problems of the 1% (or the 3%, or the 5%). But they re real

enough regardless. By all means feel jealous of acquaintances' Instagram photos

of exotic meals and faraway attractions. But harbour a small amount of concern

as well.