Remote workers show higher rates of depression and anxiety, study finds
A new study published in the journal *Science* has found that people working remotely experience higher rates of depression and anxiety compared to workers whose jobs require them to be on-site.
The research examined mental health outcomes across different work arrangements. Remote workers reported elevated levels of depression and anxiety, and they visited mental health professionals at higher rates than their counterparts in jobs that cannot be performed from home.
The study also documented increased social isolation among remote workers. Researchers measured various factors including symptom frequency, professional mental health visits, and social connection metrics.
However, the findings do not lead researchers to recommend mandatory office returns. Scientists cautioned against interpreting the data as support for universal return-to-office policies. They noted that forcing all employees back to physical workplaces would not address the underlying factors contributing to remote workers' mental health challenges.
The research adds to a growing body of work examining how different work arrangements affect employee wellbeing. While remote work offers flexibility and eliminates commutes for many workers, the study suggests it may carry unexamined costs to mental health through reduced in-person social contact and potential isolation.
The researchers did not propose specific interventions in their published findings, leaving questions open about what policies or practices might mitigate the mental health disparities they identified without requiring full-time office presence.
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