The bar chart illustrates the average number of hours worked per week by eight different occupational groups, while the pie chart compares the proportion of workers suffering from stress-related illnesses within these professions.
Overall, business men work the longest hours, whereas lecturers spend the least time on work per week. In contrast, the pie chart reveals an inverse trend for lecturers, who suffer the most from work-related stress, while programmers account for the smallest share of illness.
Looking at the bar chart, business men and movie producers log the highest number of weekly working hours, at approximately 70 and 62 hours respectively. At the opposite end of the scale, lecturers work only around 25 hours per week. As for the remaining occupations, doctors and writers work around 51 and 45 hours, followed by programmers (40 hours), lawyers (35 hours), and chefs (30 hours).
Turning to the pie chart, lecturers represent the highest percentage of people suffering from stress-related illness at 25%. This is followed closely by movie producers at 18% and doctors at 15%. Lawyers and writers share the same figure at 8% each, while chefs stand at 10%. Conversely, the lowest incidence of stress is found among programmers, who account for a mere 5% of the total.
