Self-Reported Health and Sleep Complaints Among Nursing Personnel Working Under 12 h Night and Day Shifts

Jan 14, 2005Chronobiology international

Health and sleep problems reported by nurses working 12-hour day and night shifts

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Abstract

Among 258 female nursing personnel, 41.5% reported being moonlighters, with long work hours impacting nonprofessional activities.

  • Night workers reported fewer migraine headaches compared to day workers, with a prevalence ratio of 0.74.
  • Mild emotional disorders were less frequent among night workers (PR=0.76) and ex-night workers (PR=0.68) than those who never worked nights.
  • No significant difference in sleep complaints was observed between night and day workers, possibly due to work schedule characteristics.
  • A strong association was found between working nights for more than 10 years and high cholesterol levels (PR=2.58).
  • Working nights more than four times in a 2-week span was linked to complaints about insufficient time for family (PR=1.96) and leisure (PR=1.54).

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Full Text

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