Registration: DOI: 10.1093/sleep/zsaa194
Status: Published
Tags: Circadian, Field study, Light & environment, Nurses, Sleep
External URL: https://academic.oup.com/sleep/article/44/3/zsaa194/5909282
This randomized crossover trial tested whether changing hospital evening lighting to a blue-depleted spectrum (warmer light with less blue wavelength) would better support circadian health. Twelve healthy adults stayed for five days in each lighting condition: standard hospital lighting and the blue-depleted system. Compared with standard lighting, the blue-depleted environment caused less melatonin suppression, shifted melatonin onset earlier, and led to slightly longer total sleep time and more REM sleep. Participants also showed lower neurocognitive arousal, with no significant side effects reported.
This study shows that the type of light in your environment matters just as much as how much light you get. Warmer, blue-depleted evening light helped preserve melatonin and improved sleep quality, which is critical for people whose schedules already disrupt their body clock. For night-shift workers, it suggests that adjusting workplace or home lighting—whether through specialized bulbs, filters, or blue-blocking glasses—can support circadian alignment and make recovery sleep deeper and more restorative.
PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32954412/