Subjective and Objective Evaluation of Sleep and Performance in Daytime Versus Nighttime Sleep in Extended-Hours Shift-Workers at an Underground Mine
- 1 March 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine
- Vol. 46 (3) , 212-226
- https://doi.org/10.1097/01.jom.0000117421.95392.31
Abstract
Extended hours of shift work has the potential for adverse consequences for workers, particularly during the nightshift, such as poorer sleep quality during the day, increased worker fatigue, and fatigue-related accidents and decreased work performance. This study examined subjective and objective measurements of sleep and performance in a group of underground miners before and after the change from a backward-rotating 8-hour to a forward-rotating 10-hour shift schedule. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the short- and long-term impact of a shift schedule change on sleep and performance. The results demonstrated improved subjective and objective measures of sleep and performance on the new 10-hour nightshift schedule. The 10-hour nightshift workers subjectively reported more refreshing sleep, fewer performance impairments and driving difficulties than 8-hour nightshift workers. The results of the objective measures of sleep and performance on the 10-hour nightshifts were overall similar or possibly better than those measured on the 10-hour dayshifts. These are some of the first data to suggest that a nightshift that does not encompass the entire night period could have significant benefits to shift-workers. We suggest that these benefits are mostly the result of the timing of the new nightshift start and end times rather than other shift-schedule factors.Keywords
This publication has 78 references indexed in Scilit:
- Health effects of shift work and extended hours of workOccupational and Environmental Medicine, 2001
- Telephoning a nursing department: callers’ experiencesNursing Standard, 1996
- Predicting duration of sleep from the three process model of regulation of alertness.Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1996
- Effects of timing of shifts on sleepiness and sleep durationJournal of Sleep Research, 1995
- Relationship of day versus night sleep to physician performance and moodAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1994
- Age and adjustment to night work.Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1994
- Shiftwork and the older workerExperimental Aging Research, 1993
- Job content and working time: the scope for joint changeErgonomics, 1991
- Circadian characteristics influencing interindividual differences in tolerance and adjustment to shiftworkErgonomics, 1989
- The suprachiasmatic nucleus and the organization of a circadian systemTrends in Neurosciences, 1982