USA TODAY US Edition

Your office may be making you sick

- Maurie Backman The Motley Fool do

Why you should speak up if you feel ill.

When you work in an office, germs are unavoidabl­e – especially during the winter months, when there always seems to be something going around from the latest cold to the flu.

But it’s not just germs that might be plaguing you physically when you’re trying to plug away at your desk. It could be that your office itself is making you feel unwell.

It’s a problem known as sick building syndrome, and it happens when your physical environmen­t (in this case, your place of work) makes you feel ill. It’s also something you should feel free to speak up about before your health worsens.

The problem with office buildings

Many office buildings – especially high-rise ones – have pretty poor air quality, due in part to the fact that windows are perpetuall­y closed and nothing but recycled air circulates. Furthermor­e, dust can accumulate in untreated vents, causing you (and workers like you) to regularly breathe it in.

And let’s not discount the possibilit­y of mold and other allergens taking up residence in your place of work. Your office building might have a mold problem even if it appears clean and uncontamin­ated.

The result? A host of symptoms from respirator­y problems to headaches to dizziness. On a basic level, those symptoms might impede your productivi­ty, causing you to fall behind at work through no fault of your own. On a more serious level, you might be putting your health at risk simply by going to work.

Speak up

If you’re concerned that your office environmen­t is making you feel ill, you shouldn’t stay silent about it – especially if colleagues of yours have similar complaints. If you bring the problem to the right people’s attention, they can check with the building management team (assuming your company rents space) to ensure that proper health protocols are being maintained.

If your company owns the building, it might need to sink resources into running airquality tests and addressing issues that are plaguing employees – but that’s a cost it will need to bear if it wants to continue running.

Of course, some people are just naturally sensitive to environmen­tal triggers that aren’t necessaril­y dangerous – such as recycled air as opposed to the fresh kind that flows in through windows. If that’s the case, and the folks who are in charge of your office building are doing everything right, you might ask for the option to work from home, at least on a partial basis. And for the days you go to the office, schedule time to step outside and take some breaks.

Still, if, despite your efforts and those of your company, the situation doesn’t seem to improve, your best bet might be to dust off your resume and find work elsewhere.

You deserve to feel healthy at the office, and if your current setup doesn’t lend itself to that, you’re better off moving on than compromisi­ng your health.

One final thing: If you have documented health problems and your company refuses to address your complaints, you might consider taking legal action. This especially holds true if a medical profession­al warns that your current ailments might have long-term repercussi­ons, and nobody in charge took steps to do anything about it.

The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. The Motley Fool is a USA TODAY content partnerdes­igned to help people take control of their financial lives. Its content is produced independen­tly of USA TODAY.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Many office buildings have poor air quality because the windows are perpetuall­y closed.
GETTY IMAGES Many office buildings have poor air quality because the windows are perpetuall­y closed.

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