Full text is available at the source.
Quantifying cumulative circadian disruption from shift work and associations with health outcomes in a large cohort of nurses
Measuring ongoing daily rhythm disruption from shift work and its links to health in many nurses
AI simplified
Abstract
The median cumulative circadian disruption among shift workers was 1,674 hours over six years.
- High cumulative circadian disruption (β₯2,809 hours) is associated with a 10% increase in the prevalence of sleep problems.
- Melatonin use is nearly doubled (IRR=1.86) among those with high cumulative circadian disruption.
- Sleep medication use is 15% more likely (IRR=1.15) in individuals with high cumulative circadian disruption.
- Cumulative circadian disruption is linked to a 4% increase in the likelihood of being overweight (IRR=1.04).
- The number of night shifts performed shows a strong correlation (r=0.93) with cumulative circadian disruption.
AI simplified