.......................................................................................................................................
Fluorescent Lights
The effect flourescent lights can have on your productivity and welfare
by
Fluorescent lights are a
common light source in an office building and shopping markets.
With the advent of compact
fluorescent lights, they are becoming commonplace most homes as well.
Fluorescent lights are cheap
to buy compared to how long they last (about 13 times longer than regular
incandescent bulb) and cheap to operate requiring a fraction of the energy
incandescent bulbs do.
But they can be incredibly bad
for you.
The Problems
There
have been hundreds of studies done since the last quarter of the last century
that have shown causal links between elongated exposure to fluorescent lights
and various negative effects.
The
base of these problems is all based on the quality of light that's emitted.
The
theory is basically that we are children of the sun.
It is
only relatively recently, with the proliferation of electricity, that humankind
has taken complete control of the night and interior spaces.
Before
that most light came from the sun or a flame, and since flames didn't give you
that much light you usually woke according to the sun and worked by a window.
With
the light bulb, we had the ability to do more
at night and work in enclosed rooms without windows.
When
the fluorescent light came about businesses had a cheap and durable light
source so of course, they adopted it. But it's not the same type of light as
the sun gives us.
The sun gives us a full spectrum light, that is, a light that spans the
entirety of the visual spectrum. In fact, the sun gives us a lot more than the
visual spectrum.
Incandescent
lights give off a full spectrum, but not as much as sunlight. Fluorescent
lights give off a rather limited spectrum.
A lot
of our body chemistry is based on the day-night cycle and we refer to it as the
circadian rhythm.
Theoretically,
if you do not get sufficient exposure to sunlight your circadian rhythm gets
messed up and that, in turn, messes up your hormones and then you're all
screwed up.
Health Effects
There
are a number of negative health effects that have been linked to working under
fluorescent lights that are theorized to be caused by this body chemistry
mechanism such as:
· Migraines
· Eye strain
· Problems
sleeping, due to melatonin suppression
· Symptoms
of Seasonal Affective Disorder or depression
· Endocrine
disruption and poor immune systems
· Female
hormonal/menstrual cycle disruption
· Increases
in breast cancer rates and tumor formation
· Stress/Anxiety,
due to cortisol suppression
· Sexual
development/maturation disruption
· Obesity
· Agoraphobia
(anxiety disorder)
.
The other main cause of problems with fluorescent lights is that they flicker.
Fluorescent light bulbs
contain a gas that gets excited and glows when electricity is passed through
this.
The electricity is not
constant. It is controlled by an electric ballast that pulses on and off really
fast. To most people, it is so fast that it looks like it is on constantly.
However,
some people can perceive the flicker even if they can't consciously see it.
This can cause:
·
Migraines
·
Headaches
·
Eye
strain
·
Stress/Anxiety
Additionally,
fluorescent bulbs, especially cheaper bulbs, may have a green cast to them
making all the colors in your environment drabber and sickly looking.
The Solutions
If
you are forced to work/live beneath fluorescent lights for extended periods of
time each day there are a number of things you can do to combat the negative
effects.
The
first is to get out in the sun more. Getting sun exposure, especially for
stints in the morning midday and late afternoon, can help maintain your
circadian rhythm.
Putting
in some windows, skylights, or solar tubes to bring sunlight into your interior
environment can work as well.
Short
of bringing in the sun you can bring in a light source with a fuller spectrum.
There
are some "full spectrum" and "daylight spectrum"
fluorescent lights in the market that have a better color temperature spread
than regular fluorescent lights so they do help, but they don't replace
sunlight.
Alternately
you can put a full spectrum light filter over your fluorescent bulb or light
fixture lens that alters the light coming out of the fluorescent bulb and gives
it a fuller spectrum.
These
tend to give off more Ultraviolet (UV) rays that may cause skin problems, prematurely
age materials like plastic or leather, and cause photos to fade.
Incandescent
lights do a decent job of providing a good spectrum of light that most people
respond to.
Another
benefit of incandescent lights is that they are a constant light source that
doesn't flicker.
If
you perceive fluorescent flicker having a single incandescent light bulb on in
the room can be enough to cover the flicker and keep it from affecting you.
They can also balance out any green tint given off by the fluorescent bulb.
In
some case phototherapy, or light box therapy, can counteract lack of sunlight
exposure. This is a common treatment for Seasonal Affective Disorder and it
uses an incredibly bright light for a limited amount of time to help keep your
body chemistry regulated.
Optometrists
have long prescribed glasses with a very light rose-colored tint on them to
counteract the effects of working under fluorescent lights, especially in women
who are experiencing hormonal problems.
Flicker
problems can be improved by using fluorescent light fixtures that use
electronic ballasts as opposed to magnetic ones.
Chris Adams
Human
factors engineer and industrial designer
Human
systems integration lead at Strata-G Solutions, Inc.
Experience
Chris
Adams is a former writer for ThoughtCo who wrote about ergonomics for more than
nine years. Ergonomics is the study of how humans effectively interact with
their work environment. Chris has more than 11 years of experience working in
the field of human factors and ergonomics. He was a human factors and systems
engineer with Jacobs Engineering working on NASA's the Ares I and V rocket
systems. Chris later became the lead of human-system integration for Strata-G
Solutions, Inc.
Chris
specializes in furniture design and corporate identity and works as an independent
consultant on various design projects. His work for ThoughtCo appears on many
websites, newsletters, and books which focus on engineering spaces for human
use.
Education
Chris
Adams earned a Bachelor of Industrial Design (B.I.D.) in Industrial and Product
Design from Auburn University in 1999.
ThoughtCo and Dotdash
ThoughtCo is a premier
reference site focusing on expert-created education content. We are one of the
top-10 information sites in the world as rated by comScore, a leading Internet
measurement company. Every month, more than 13 million readers seek answers to
their questions on ThoughtCo.
For
more than 20 years, Dotdash brands have been helping people find answers,
solve problems, and get inspired. We are one of the top-20 largest content
publishers on the Internet according to comScore, and reach more than 30% of
the U.S. population monthly. Our brands collectively have won more than 20
industry awards in the last year alone, and recently Dotdash was named
Publisher of the Year by Digiday, a leading industry publication.
No comments:
Post a Comment