4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Indoor climate, psychosocial work environment and symptoms in open-plan offices

Journal

INDOOR AIR
Volume 16, Issue 5, Pages 392-401

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0668.2006.00444.x

Keywords

open-plan office; sick building syndrome symptoms; psychosocial work environment; indoor air quality; questionnaire study; indoor environment

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To study the indoor climate, the psychosocial work environment and occupants' symptoms in offices a cross-sectional questionnaire survey was made in 11 naturally and 11 mechanically ventilated office buildings. Nine of the buildings had mainly cellular offices; five of the buildings had mainly open-plan offices, whereas eight buildings had a mixture of cellular, multi-person and open-plan offices. A total of 2301 occupants, corresponding to a response rate of 72%, completed a retrospective questionnaire. The questionnaire comprised questions concerning environmental perceptions, mucous membrane irritation, skin irritation, central nervous system (CNS) symptoms and psychosocial factors. Occupants in open-plan offices are more likely to perceive thermal discomfort, poor air quality and noise and they more frequently complain about CNS and mucous membrane symptoms than occupants in multi-person and cellular offices. The association between psychosocial factors and office size was weak. Open-plan offices may not be suited for all job types.

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