Arab Times

Night shifts plus unhealthy lifestyle recipe for diabetes

Hemlibra effective in study

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NEW YORK, Dec 4, (Agencies): Women who work rotating night shifts and also have unhealthy lifestyle habits may be much more likely to develop diabetes than peers with only one of these risk factors, a large US study suggests.

In the study of female nurses, every five years of working a mix of night and daytime shifts was associated with a 31 percent increase in risk of developing diabetes. Each of four unhealthy habits – drinking, smoking, failing to exercise and eating poorly – was associated with a more than doubled diabetes risk.

And, women with both rotating night shifts and any of these four unhealthy habits had almost three times the risk of diabetes as those who only worked days and followed a healthy lifestyle, researcher­s report in the The BMJ.

Benefits

“Most cases of type 2 diabetes could be prevented by adherence to a healthy lifestyle, and the benefits could be larger in rotating night-shift workers,” lead study author Dr Zhilei Shan of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston and Huazhong University of Science and Technology in Wuhan, China.

Lifestyle factors like obesity, smoking, drinking, inactivity and a poor diet have long been linked to an increased risk of diabetes. Lack of sleep and irregular sleep schedules have also been tied to diabetes in previous studies.

For the current study, researcher­s examined data on more than 140,000 nurses without diabetes, heart disease or cancer who completed medical, food and lifestyle questionna­ires at regular intervals starting between 1976 and 1989.

Many nurses work a mix of daytime and overnight shifts because hospital care is required around the clock. Researcher­s counted survey participan­ts as nurses with rotating night shifts when they worked at least three overnight shifts per month in addition to daytime and evening shifts.

During 22 to 24 years of followup, almost 11,000 women were diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, the most common form, which is associated with aging and obesity.

Because the diabetes risk was higher for a combinatio­n of night shifts and unhealthy habits than it was for individual risk factors, the results suggest there is an interactio­n between the job schedules and habits that combines to make diabetes even more likely to develop, the study authors note.

The authors calculated that rotating night shift work accounted for approximat­ely 17 percent of the combined higher risk of type diabetes, unhealthy lifestyle for around 71 percent and the remaining 11 percent was additional risk related to the interactio­n of the two.

“Shift workers therefore have more to gain from stopping smoking, eating better, exercising and losing weight,” Shan said by email.

The study wasn’t designed to determine whether or how certain work schedules or lifestyle habits might directly cause diabetes. Most of the women participat­ing were white, so it’s also possible the findings might not apply to men or to a more diverse population of women.

Even so, the results add to evidence suggesting that shift work can have a negative impact on health, said Mahee Gilbert-Ouimet of the Institute for Work and Health in Toronto.

ZURICH:

Also:

Roche’s Hemlibra provided sustained bleed control in the largest pivotal study to date of children with a form of haemophili­a, the Swiss drugmaker said on Monday.

Nearly 77 percent of children receiving Hemlibra once weekly experience­d no treated bleeds, while Hemlibra once weekly reduced treated bleeds by 99 percent compared to prior bypassing agents, it said in a statement. Hemlibra every two weeks and every four weeks also showed clinically meaningful control of bleeding, it added.

Data from the phase III HAVEN 2 study evaluating Hemlibra in children younger than 12 with haemophili­a A with factor VIII inhibitors were presented at the 60th American Society of Hematology annual meeting.

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