Time-Related Eating Patterns Are Associated with the Total Daily Intake of Calories and Macronutrients in Day and Night Shift Workers

Jun 10, 2022Nutrients

How Eating Times Relate to Daily Calories and Nutrients in Day and Night Shift Workers

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Abstract

Eighty-one Brazilian male military police officers were studied to assess the association between time-related eating patterns and daily caloric and macronutrient intake.

  • Night shift workers had a later last meal, longer eating duration, and a later caloric midpoint compared to day workers.
  • Late eaters consumed more total energy, fat, and protein, but less carbohydrates than early eaters.
  • In day workers, the timing of the first meal was negatively correlated with total energy and carbohydrate intake.
  • For both shift groups, the timing of the last meal was positively correlated with total energy and protein intake.
  • Eating duration was positively correlated with energy and carbohydrate intake for both day and night workers.

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Key numbers

81
Participants
Total number of male military police officers studied
52
Night Workers
Number of night shift workers included in the study
29
Day Workers
Number of day shift workers included in the study

Full Text

What this is

  • This research investigates the link between time-related eating patterns and daily calorie and macronutrient intake among Brazilian military police officers.
  • The study involves 81 male shift workers, comparing 29 day workers and 52 night workers.
  • Key findings reveal that late eating patterns are associated with higher energy and macronutrient consumption.

Essence

  • Time-related eating patterns, such as later meal times and longer eating durations, correlate with increased daily energy and macronutrient intake in both day and night shift workers.

Key takeaways

  • Night shift workers consume their last meal later and have a longer eating duration compared to day workers, leading to higher protein intake.
  • Late eaters, regardless of shift, have higher total daily energy, fat, and protein intake, while early eaters consume more carbohydrates.
  • The study suggests that managing eating times could be crucial for controlling caloric intake and preventing obesity in shift workers.

Caveats

  • The cross-sectional design limits the ability to establish causality between eating patterns and intake.
  • Subjective dietary assessments rely on participants' memory and motivation, which may introduce bias.
  • Findings are based solely on male police officers, limiting generalizability to other populations.

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