Cortisol Awakening Response and Stress in Female Nurses on Monthly Shift Rotations: A Longitudinal Study

Sep 26, 2022BioMed research international

Morning Stress Hormone Response and Stress Levels in Female Nurses Working Monthly Shift Rotations Over Time

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Abstract

Night-shift nurses have significantly lower (CARi) values than day-shift and evening-shift nurses.

  • Night-shift nurses experience greater stress related to the inability to complete personal tasks compared to day-shift and evening-shift nurses.
  • Regression analysis shows night-shift nurses have higher stress levels than both day-shift (4.39) and evening-shift (3.95) nurses.
  • Cortisol awakening response (CARi) is significantly lower in night-shift nurses compared to day-shift (βˆ’3.41) and evening-shift (βˆ’2.92) nurses.
  • Cortisol levels measured 30 minutes after waking are also significantly lower in night-shift nurses than in day-shift (βˆ’3.88) and evening-shift (βˆ’3.31) nurses.
  • Lower CARi and cortisol levels in night-shift nurses suggest they may be more adversely affected by shift work.

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Key numbers

-3.41
Decrease in CARi for Night-Shift Nurses
Regression coefficient comparing night-shift vs. day-shift nurses
-3.88
Decrease in Cortisol Levels 30 Minutes After Waking
Regression coefficient comparing night-shift vs. day-shift nurses
4.39
Increase in Stress from Inability to Complete Personal Tasks
Regression coefficient comparing night-shift vs. day-shift nurses

Full Text

What this is

  • This longitudinal study examines the () and work stress in female nurses on monthly shift rotations.
  • It focuses on how different shifts (day, evening, night) affect cortisol levels and stress related to personal task completion.
  • Forty-one female nurses participated, providing saliva samples and completing a stress checklist over three months.

Essence

  • Night-shift nurses experience lower cortisol awakening responses and higher stress from personal task completion compared to day and evening-shift nurses.

Key takeaways

  • Night-shift nurses display significantly lower cortisol awakening responses (CARi) than day-shift and evening-shift nurses, indicating impaired stress response.
  • Night-shift nurses report greater stress from the inability to complete personal tasks compared to their day and evening counterparts.
  • Cortisol levels 30 minutes after waking are also significantly lower in night-shift nurses, suggesting a disrupted physiological response.

Caveats

  • The study's sample size of 41 female nurses may limit the generalizability of the findings to other populations or male nurses.
  • The research only measured cortisol levels at two timepoints, which may not capture the full dynamics of cortisol changes.

Definitions

  • Cortisol Awakening Response (CAR): The increase in cortisol levels following waking, peaking 30 minutes after, and indicating HPA axis activity.
  • Taiwan Nurse Stress Checklist (NSC): A tool used to assess various aspects of work-related stress among nurses, consisting of 43 items.

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