Association of Exposure to Artificial Light at Night While Sleeping With Risk of Obesity in Women

🥈 Top 2% JournalJun 11, 2019JAMA internal medicine

Link Between Sleeping with Artificial Light at Night and Obesity Risk in Women

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Abstract

Among 43,722 women aged 35 to 74 years, exposure to artificial light at night while sleeping is associated with a higher prevalence of obesity.

  • Having any exposure to artificial light at night during sleep was linked to an increased prevalence of obesity based on body mass index (BMI) and other measures.
  • Higher prevalence ratios were observed for general obesity (PR, 1.03), central obesity measures like waist circumference (PR, 1.12), waist-to-hip ratio (PR, 1.04), and waist-to-height ratio (PR, 1.07).
  • Exposure to artificial light at night was also associated with a higher risk of developing obesity over time (RR, 1.19).
  • Sleeping with a television or light on was correlated with significant weight gain (RR, 1.17) and increased BMI (RR, 1.13).
  • An increase in the risk of becoming overweight (RR, 1.22) and obese (RR, 1.33) was noted among those exposed to artificial light at night.

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