Insight inTo Stress and POOping on Work TIME (ITS POO TIME): Protocol for a Web-Based, Cross-Sectional Study
Phillip John Tully, Suzanne Cosh, Gary Wittert, Sean Martin, Andrew Vincent, Antonina Mikocka-Walus, Deborah Turnbull

TL;DR
This study explores how work schedules affect bowel habits and stress, aiming to improve worker health and workplace policies.
Contribution
The study introduces a web-based protocol to investigate the link between occupational work patterns and gastrointestinal health.
Findings
Shift workers may have higher rates of gut-brain interaction disorders compared to nonshift workers.
Workplace stress and anxiety about bowel movements are associated with stool form and frequency.
Qualitative data will reveal attitudes and feelings about defecation in occupational settings.
Abstract
Long occupational working hours and shift work are common in high-, middle-, and lower-income economies. Bowel movement frequency and stool form in occupational settings may be important markers of stressful working conditions as well as diurnal gut microbiota action, gastrointestinal discomfort, and disorders of gut-brain interaction (DGBI). Characterizing DGBI in shift and nonshift workers could help identify the impact of diurnal work patterns on workers’ physical and mental health, including anxiety related to bowel movements. This study aims to outline the Insight inTo Stress and POOping on work TIME (ITS POO TIME) protocol describing a web-based multimethods research project on DGBI, stool form and frequency, psychological factors, sleep, diet, and anxiety related to bowel movements in occupational settings by comparison to residential settings. Study 1 comprises a web-based…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSleep and Work-Related Fatigue · Workplace Health and Well-being · Sleep and related disorders
