LIGHT INTENSITY EXPOSURE, SLEEP DURATION, PHYSICAL ACTIVITY, AND BIOMARKERS OF MELATONIN AMONG ROTATING SHIFT NURSES

Nov 18, 2009Chronobiology international

Light exposure, sleep length, activity, and melatonin levels in nurses working rotating shifts

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Abstract

Mean sleep duration for nurses working during the day was 8.27 hours, significantly longer than the 4.78 hours for those working at night.

  • Light intensity during sleep was significantly higher for night shift workers compared to day shift workers.
  • Urinary melatonin levels were significantly higher among nurses working days than those working nights.
  • An inverse association between light exposure and urinary melatonin levels was observed, but this was not significant when analyzed by shift group.
  • There was no significant correlation between sleep duration and melatonin levels, suggesting sleep duration may not effectively indicate melatonin production.
  • Circadian rhythms of night workers remained unchanged, with peak melatonin production still occurring at night.

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