Shift Work, Chronotype, and Melatonin Rhythm in Nurses (NHS II Sub‑study)

Shift Work, Chronotype, and Melatonin Rhythm in Nurses (NHS II Sub‑study)

Type: Field / Observational study

Registration: PMCID: PMC6750706

Status: Published

Tags: Circadian, Field study, Light & environment, Nurses

External URL: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6750706/

Summary

Night shifts and evening chronotype aligned with altered light exposure and suppressed melatonin rhythms in active nurses.

Why It Matters For Night Shift Workers and Night Owls

On‑shift measurements whether melatonin timed before daytime sleep was evident on shift as sleep, alertness, recovery, and metabolic markers for night‑shift workers and night owls. Results help move melatonin from vague sedative to a time‑sensitive tool studied in the context of night schedules. For people who work nights, that frames an everyday choice (when you eat, how you light the end of a shift, how rest is split) as part of the mechanism, not just routine.

Tags

  • Circadian
  • Field study
  • Light & environment
  • Nurses

Notes

Nurses’ Health Study II sub‑study.

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