A Swedish retirement home may seem an unlikely setting for an experiment about the future of work, but a small group of elderly-care nurses in Sweden have made radical changes to their daily lives in an effort to improve quality and efficiency. In February the nurses switched from an eight-hour to a six-hour working day for the same wage the first controlled trial of shorter hours since a rightward political shift in Sweden a decade ago snuffed out earlier efforts to explore alternatives to the traditional working week.
I used to be exhausted all the time, I would come home from work and pass out on the sofa, says Lise-Lotte Pettersson, 41, an assistant nurse at Svartedalens care home in Gothenburg. But not now. I am much more alert: I have much more energy for my work, and also for family life.
The Svartedalens experiment is inspiring others around Sweden: at Gothenburgs Sahlgrenska University hospital, orthopaedic surgery has moved to a six-hour day, as have doctors and nurses in two hospital departments in Umeå to the north. And the trend is not confined to the public sector: small businesses claim that a shorter day can increase productivity while reducing staff turnover.
At Svartedalens, the trial is viewed as a success, even if, with an extra 14 members of staff hired to cope with the shorter hours and new shift patterns, it is costing the council money. Ann-Charlotte Dahlbom Larsson, head of elderly care at the home, says staff wellbeing is better and the standard of care is even higher.
Since the 1990s we have had more work and fewer people we cant do it any more, she says. There is a lot of illness and depression among staff in the care sector because of exhaustion the lack of balance between work and life is not good for anyone.
Pettersson, one of 82 nurses at Svartedalens, agrees. Caring for elderly people, some of whom have dementia, demands constant vigilance and creativity, and with a six-hour day she can sustain a higher standard of care. You cannot allow elderly people to become stressed, otherwise it turns into a bad day for everyone, she says.
After a century in which working hours were gradually reduced, holidays increased and retirement reached earlier, there has been an increase in hours worked for the first time in history, says Roland Paulsen, a researcher in business administration at the University of Lund. People are working harder and longer, he says but this is not necessarily for the best.
For a long time politicians have been competing to say we must create more jobs with longer hours work has become an end in itself, he says. But productivity has doubled since the 1970s, so technically we even have the potential for a four-hour working day. It is a question of how these productivity gains are distributed. It did not used to be utopian to cut working hours we have done this before.
At Toyota service centres in Gothenburg, working hours have been shorter for more than a decade. Employees moved to a six-hour day 13 years ago and have never looked back. Customers were unhappy with long waiting times, while staff were stressed and making mistakes, according to Martin Banck, the managing director, whose idea it was to cut the time worked by his mechanics. From a 7am to 4pm working day the service centre switched to two six-hour shifts with full pay, one starting at 6am and the other at noon, with fewer and shorter breaks. There are 36 mechanics on the scheme.
Staff feel better, there is low turnover and it is easier to recruit new people, Banck says. They have a shorter travel time to work, there is more efficient use of the machines and lower capital costs everyone is happy. Profits have risen by 25%, he adds.
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For Maria Bråth, boss of internet startup Brath, the six-hour working day the company introduced when it was formed three years ago gives it a competitive advantage because it attracts better staff and keeps them. They are the most valuable thing we have, she says an offer of more pay elsewhere would not make up for the shorter hours they have at Brath.
The company, which has 22 staff in offices in Stockholm and Örnsköldsvik, produces as much, if not more, than its competitors do in eight-hour days, she says. It has a lot to do with the fact that we are very creative we couldnt keep it up for eight hours.
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The 1990s saw several experiments with the six-hour day for a full wage in Sweden. In Kiruna, a mining town in the far north, home care for the elderly moved to a six-hour day in 1989 so the working lives of female carers would better correlate with those of their husbands in the mines. Stockholm city council conducted a major trial of a six-hour day in care centres for children, older people and those with disabilities from 1996 to 1998.
But when power passed from left to right in Kiruna in 2005, the reform was reversed and staff went back to eight hours. Similarly, with a change of administration in Stockholm the trial came to an end.
It was a political decision to end it, they said it was too expensive, says Prof Birgitta Olsson of Lund University, who was involved in research to evaluate the Stockholm experiment. But it was a good investment in improved wellbeing for the community. More people were in jobs, they were in better health and enjoyed better working conditions.
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