Toyota Engineer Died From Overwork

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Kestas

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I just read this today. So... what is the meaning of life?

Originally Posted By: article
A Japanese labor bureau has ruled that one of Toyota Motor Corp.'s top car engineers died from working too many hours, the latest decision against overwork in Japan, where stoic acceptance of extended overtime has long been the norm.

"In the two months up to his death, he averaged more than 80 hours of overtime per month, the criteria for overwork," an officer at the Aichi Labor Bureau, who asked to remain anonymous because she is not an official spokeswoman, said Wednesday.

The man who died was aged 45 and had been under severe pressure as the lead engineer in developing a hybrid version of Toyota's blockbuster Camry line, said Mikio Mizuno, the lawyer representing his wife. His identity is being withheld at the request of his family, who continue to live in Toyota City where the company is based.

He regularly worked nights and weekends, was frequently sent abroad and was grappling with shipping a model for the influential North American International Auto Show in Detroit when he died of ischemic heart disease in January 2006. His daughter found his body at their home the day before he was to leave for the United States.

The ruling was handed down June 30 and will allow his family to collect benefits from his work insurance, Mizuno said.

In a statement, Toyota offered its condolences and said it would work to improve monitoring of the health of its workers.

It is the most recent in a string of decisions against long working hours in Japan, which is struggling to cut down on deaths from overworking, known as "karoshi." Such deaths have steadily increased since the Health Ministry first recognized the phenomenon in 1987.

A court in central Japan last year ordered the government to pay compensation to Hiroko Uchino, the wife of a Toyota employee who collapsed at work and died at age 30 in 2002. She took the case to court after her application to the local labor bureau for compensation was rejected.

http://www.manufacturing.net/News-Japan-Toyota-Engineer-Died-From-Overwork.aspx?menuid=36
 
Originally Posted By: Quest
..You can never see that happening here (laughs).

Q.


Yeah no kidding. (having just completed a 72hr work week)

Joel
 
What? Only a few deaths? Obviously there's more utility to be had from the mules if this is the low level of casualty.
grin2.gif
 
I was going to make a funny..its not really funny..duhhh...The world is probably missing a very good worker bee.
frown.gif
 
Originally Posted By: Al
I was going to make a funny..its not really funny..duhhh...The world is probably missing a very good worker bee.
frown.gif



You're right, Al. It's unfortunate that he was so devoted to some "work ethic" that it destroyed him. He didn't love the work, he was enslaved to it. Nothing against a good work ethic or hard work, but there are limits to both in terms of human performance and endurance ..and this guy met his.
 
Originally Posted By: TooManyWheels
If they don't die you're not doing it right....


Yeah really....never been to Japan, but I've been told it's pretty "intense" over there.

I remember in college watching a video of the Japanese work ethic and how serious they took many jobs even in fast food industry.

No job is worth more than your health IMO. I don't care what you do.
 
Back in the Henry Ford II days there was a Ford exec that shot himself in his bedroom, apparently from job pressures and who knows what else.

I have a lot of job stress. They cut staff to bare bones in a lean year and now we are flooded with work. Cutting what corners I can. Some thing just get delayed. Some things get screwed up. Can't do 99% on everything, something has to slip.

But while some stress is healthy, too much stress is supposed to be bad for your cardiovascular system.
 
Originally Posted By: TallPaul
too much stress is supposed to be bad for your cardiovascular system.


Not just cardiovascular, pretty much all of them. I doubt if there is any serious illness that doesn't have stress as one cause.
 
Originally Posted By: TallPaul
But while some stress is healthy, too much stress is supposed to be bad for your cardiovascular system.


There are several kinds of stress. The kind you describe, chronic stress, which causes hypertension and high cholesterol, is never good for you. Google, distress, eustress, acute, and chronic stress for an explanation.
 
I suspect this happens quite often, because businesses want to get a product out before the fad passes.

Then, that product which does come out on time, is a piece of junk because engineers made miscalculations, and never had enough time to work the bugs out.
 
Originally Posted By: artificialist
I suspect this happens quite often, because businesses want to get a product out before the fad passes.

Then, that product which does come out on time, is a piece of junk because engineers made miscalculations, and never had enough time to work the bugs out.
They design it as cheap as possible.
 
The company is only part of his work. Who knows he has to "work" when he got home with the kids and maybe overtime with the wife.
 
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