The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Rig research reveals night shift workers at greater risk of cancer

- By Janet Boyle jboyle@sundaypost.com

Night shift staff may be at greater risk of cancer, according to a study of offshore oil workers.

The research in Norway found workers on “rollover” shift patterns who worked both day and nights had a markedly higher risk of developing aggressive prostate cancer to colleagues who worked only days.

Led by Dr Leon Alexander Mclaren Berge, a Scots-norwegian scientist, the study looked at 25,000 men who had worked on oil platforms and revealed 300 had been diagnosed with an aggressive form of the cancer.

He studied offshore oil workers whose jobs rotated between night and day shifts and compared them to those on day shifts. Rotated shift workers had marked increased chances of developing aggressive prostate cancer. It follows research suggesting shift workers have a higher risk of breast cancer.

Berge, formerly of Glasgow University and now with Oslo University, said: “Night shift work may cause problems such as sleep deprivatio­n, increased stress, hormonal imbalances and other health problems with long-term implicatio­ns for cancer.

“These negative health effects may be exacerbate­d if the sleep and wake cycle is regularly disturbed over long periods of time.

“Offshore workers additional­ly have a relatively extreme shift work schedule and may work an increased number of consecutiv­e night shifts, compared to other profession­s. The Norwegian offshore industry workers have 14-day work periods, with four-week breaks in between. During each work period, workers experience one of three different work schedules – 14 day shifts, 14 night shifts, or seven night shifts, followed immediatel­y by seven day shifts, or vice versa.

“The last of these is known as rollover (or rotating) shift work and demands changes between day and night shifts, which may leave workers less time to adapt.”

Berge said humans have evolved to function based on a 24-hour sleep and wake cycle called the circadian rhythm. Night workers have low levels of the sleep hormone, melatonin. He said: “This cycle regulates many vital functions with implicatio­ns for cancer, such as digestion, the immune system and hormone production.

“People who work nights have low levels of the so-called ‘sleep hormone’ melatonin. This may be important, as prostate cancer is thought to be particular­ly sensitive to hormones, and animal experiment­s have shown melatonin helps prevent the developmen­t of cancer.

“Low melatonin levels are also linked to disrupted sex hormone production, which may contribute to the growth of prostate cancer.”

The research was triggered by the 20% increased risk of prostate cancer among Norwegian offshore workers.

Rolling shift patterns operate on UK oil platforms.

Berge said: “Night shift work has also been associated with an increased risk of both breast and prostate cancer, cancers that are particular­ly sensitive to hormones.”

Stirling University occupation­al health expert professor Andrew Watterson says evidence linking some cancers to long night and day shifts already exists for healthcare shift workers, including nurses. NHS nurses frequently work 12-hour shifts on a rolling pattern of day and night.

Watterson is calling for an urgent establishm­ent of a Scottish Industrial Injuries Advisory Council. He said: “Associatio­ns with female and male breast cancer are linked to endocrine disruption and sleep disruption. In addition, recent studies have revealed more links between night shift work, cardiovasc­ular diseases, social disruption and workplace injuries.

“These findings illustrate why Scotland needs its own Scottish Industrial Injuries Advisory Council. It would assess and act more rapidly on research.”

 ?? ?? An aerial view of an offshore oil rig drilling platform at night
An aerial view of an offshore oil rig drilling platform at night

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