Senior Clinical Psychologist and QoWL Director, Simon Easton was 
       interviewed on BBC Radio Solent where he chatted to DJ Julian Clegg about 
       recent research by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), 
       part of the UN's World Health Organisation which had found that women who 
       had worked shifts were 36% more likely to develop breast cancer. On the 
       basis of this research the Danish Government have been compensating 
       sufferers. Simon described how shift work and other non-standard working 
       hours were related to issues of quality of working life, including disrupted 
       sleep patterns and poorer work-life balance. Callers to the program gave 
       their story, and Simon commented on the ways different patterns of shift 
      work can play a key role in affecting someone's quality of working life.