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Taj McNamara
Taj McNamara is Regional Communications Director for Reliance Staffing & Recruiting/COATS Staffing Software. Marketing and Graphic Design fanatic, Pantone enthusiast, Professional Photographer and Drone Pilot. Mom of two gorgeous girls, one spoiled dog named Gear, and the king of all Siamese cats. Foodie. Mountain lover. Beach bum. Taj McNamara | Communications Director Reliance Staffing & Recruiting | reliancestaffing.com Chesapeake | Suffolk | Newport News | Virginia Beach | Richmond 2121 Old Greenbrier Rd., Suite B, Chesapeake, VA, 23320 Office 757.382.7222 | Mobile 757.816.4620 One of the nation’s best staffing firms

Second Winter for Women Workers Office Wellness and Productive Mindset

  By Taj McNamara  |    Wednesday May 30, 2019



Right. It happens every summer: Offices turn on the air-conditioning, and women freeze into Chick-sicles. 

(Shesickles? Womansickles? I don’t know, you get it, though.)

There’s actually a study on this now- so it’s not just in our head, ladies. Yes, the office is cold- even if it is 90 degrees outside. 

The “battle of the thermostat” -- when women advocate for warmer temperatures while men say they’re chill with ice-cold air conditioning -- prompted researchers Tom Chang of USC’s Marshall School of Business and Agne Kajackaite at Germany’s WZB Berlin Social Science Center to design a real-world experiment testing the impact of room temperatures on real-world tasks. 

“Standard values for one of its primary variables—metabolic rate—are based on an average male, and may overestimate female metabolic rate by up to 35% (ref. 3). This may cause buildings to be intrinsically non-energy-efficient in providing comfort to females. Therefore, we make a case to use actual metabolic rates. Moreover, with a biophysical analysis we illustrate the effect of miscalculating metabolic rate on female thermal demand.”

What does that exactly mean? Gentlemen. We’re COLD. 

Ask any female office worker, and she’ll show you her hoarde of throw blankets, snuggies, and sometimes even a little space heater, or (gasp) scarves and gloves. Tucked into our drawer in our desk, or file cabinet, or draped over our chair in layers. 

Most office buildings set temperatures based on a decades-old formula that uses the metabolic rates of men. The study concludes that buildings should “reduce gender-discriminating bias in thermal comfort” because setting temperatures at slightly warmer levels can help combat global warming.

As statistics show, women now constitute half of the work force and usually have slower metabolic rates than men, mostly because they are smaller and have more body fat, which has lower metabolic rates than muscle. Indeed, the study says, the current model “may overestimate resting heat production of women by up to 35 percent.”

Physiology and clothing. The authors also note that the model is not always calibrated accurately for women’s summer wardrobes. Dr. van Hoof, who wrote a commentary about the study, observed that many men still wear suits and ties in the summer but many women wear skirts, sandals and other lighter, more skin-baring clothes.

So they propose adjusting the model to include actual metabolic rates of women and men, plus factors like body tissue insulation, not just clothing. For example, people who weigh more get warmer faster, and older people have slower metabolic rates, the study reported.

It’s also affecting female productivity at work.

In sessions below 70 degrees, women scored an average of 28.7 (out of 35) while men scored an average of 33.7. Both genders scored around 32.6 (although women scored marginally higher) in sessions between 70 and 80 degrees. Women performed better than men in very warm temperatures, scoring an average of nearly 33 in temperatures above 80 degrees while men scored an average of 31.2.

From the study results; When the room was warmer, women answered more questions on the math and verbal tests, and got more questions right. A 1-degree Celsius increase in the room’s temperature was associated with a nearly 2 percent increase in the number of math questions the women correctly answered, and a 1 percent increase in their performance on the verbal task. 

The men, meanwhile, did better at cooler temperatures, but their decrease in performance at warmer temperatures was not as great as women’s gains. (For the logic problems, the temperature didn’t seem to make a difference.)

For employers, these findings mean that by insisting on the subzero fridges you call cubicles, not only are you making half your employees miserable, you are also sacrificing productivity. 

No wonder why grown adults — professionals nonetheless — are swaddling themselves in blankets during the workday — if a company wants to ensure a productive workforce, maybe it should consider turning up the thermostat to the mid-70s.

“People invest a lot in making sure their workers are comfortable and highly productive,” Chang concluded. “This study is saying, even if you care only about money or the performance of your workers, you may want to crank up the temperature in your office buildings.”

For some women, this study finally provides an explanation for why the creative juices flow so freely at tropical indoor temperatures. And unfortunately, it also means you should hang on to that summer sweater collection and clear out some space in a desk drawer.  

It’ll tide you over until the day thermostat justice finally arrives.


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