Iran Daily

Rotating night shifts a path to diabetes

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Working the night shift may play havoc with your blood sugar levels, a new study found.

For the study, researcher­s looked at data on more than 270,000 people in the United Kingdom and found that those who worked irregular or rotating shifts that included night shifts were 44 percent more likely to have type 2 diabetes than those who worked only days, UPI wrote.

Study co-first author Celine Vetter, who directs the University of Colorado’s Circadian and Sleep Epidemiolo­gy Laboratory, said, “Shift work, particular­ly night shifts, disrupts social and biological rhythms, as well as sleep, and has been suggested to increase the risk of metabolic disorders, including type 2 diabetes.”

The more often a person worked an irregular night shift, the greater their risk for type 2 diabetes, the findings showed.

For example, working nights less than three times a month increased the risk by 24 percent, but working nights more than eight times a month increased the risk by 36 percent.

Vetter added, “Our study is one of the first to show a dose-response relationsh­ip, where the more often people work nights, the greater their likelihood of having the disease.”

However, working a permanent night shift was not linked to an increased risk of diabetes.

The study authors suggested that these people might adapt to a consistent nightshift schedule, or perhaps they were ‘night owls’ who had a natural tendency to be awake at night.

About 15 million American workers have permanent night shifts, rotating shifts or shifts with irregular schedules, the study authors noted.

Vetter said, “If a person can’t avoid working nights, they may be able to reduce their health risks by eating a healthy diet, watching their weight, and getting enough exercise and sleep.”

The findings could not prove a cause-and-effect relationsh­ip between rotating shift work and type 2 diabetes. But, other recent studies have also found associatio­ns between these work schedules and heart disease, diabetes and cancer.

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