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Human Times
North America
AI is making workloads more intense

AI is increasing the speed, density and complexity of work rather than reducing it, according to an analysis of 164,000 workers’ digital work activity by workforce analytics and productivity-tracking software company ActivTrak. The data covers more than 443 million hours of work across 1,111 employers, making it one of the biggest studies of AI’s effects on work habits to date, the Wall Street Journal reports. “It’s not that AI doesn’t create efficiency,” observed Gabriela Mauch, ActivTrak’s chief customer officer. “It’s that the capacity it frees up immediately gets repurposed into doing other work, and that’s where the creep is likely to happen.”

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Human Times
UK
Hundreds of GPs never refuse a mental health sick note

Hundreds of GPs have told the BBC they have never refused to sign a sick note for a patient complaining of mental health issues. BBC News sent a questionnaire to more than 5,000 GPs in England asking if they had ever denied a sick note - known as a fit note - to someone who had requested one because of their mental health. Of the 752 GPs who replied, 540 said they had never refused such a request. Last year, a government-commissioned report looking into the role of employers in health and disability said that fit notes were "often problematic." The Keep Britain Working review noted GPs often did not have the time, or the occupational health training, to fully assess if someone was able to work or not. The BBC understands government officials are exploring other options, including so-called "stay in/return to work" plans developed with businesses and occupational health professionals. It is not clear if this would reform fit notes, or replace them entirely. Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) is one of 60 companies working with officials to see how this could work. Dr Richard Peters, JLR's chief medical officer, said firms had "a part to play" in supporting people with health conditions in work, adding: "It's the right thing to do because if we have a healthier staff, then we have a more productive workforce."

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Human Times
Europe
Stellantis pushes white-collar workers back to the office ​full-time

Stellantis, the carmaker that is the owner of brands ranging from Jeep to Fiat, is pushing tens of thousands of its white-collar workers in Europe back to the office ​full-time to boost efficiency. Since the pandemic, workers in France, Italy and Germany were allowed to work as little as ⁠1.5 days per week in the office. The return to office full-time will start in these three countries and "progressively extend ​to other countries," Stellantis said. The ​CFE-CGC union, the main union representing the company's workers in France, opposes the plan. "This abrupt reversal . . . undermines 10 years of pioneering policy on agility," CFE-CGC union representative Laurent Oechsel told Reuters. "It ⁠creates a ​climate of major concern."

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Human Times
Middle East
Dubai issues new law regulating outsourcing of government services

A new law in Dubai regulates the outsourcing of government services to private firms, in a bid to improve service quality and efficiency, strengthen collaboration between the public and private sectors, support Dubai's strategic goals, and create more private sector job opportunities for UAE nationals. Issued by His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Law No. (5) of 2026 allows government entities to contract private companies under specific terms. The Dubai Department of Finance will oversee these contracts, ensuring adherence to international best practices. The law mandates that outsourcing companies employ at least one UAE national for every non-national employee. Compliance is required within three years of the law's enactment.

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