This Sunday, Daylight Savings Time (DST) will begin, and Indiana will “spring forward” one hour.
Several studies show that this sudden time change, incongruent with our current sleep cycle, is not healthy for human sleep.
“Many studies have shown that Daylight Savings Time is associated with an increase in heart disease such as atrial fibrillation, mood disorders such as depression, learning issues, vigilance issues, and increase in accidents,” Dr. K Praveen Vohra, director of the Sleep Center at Ascension St. Vincent, said. “It affects thinking and learning. It has been studied in teenagers and it can affect their ability to perform appropriately in school and vigilance and driving is affected.”
The sunlight is the biggest controller of wakefulness and sleep for our brains.
The problems are all due to a desynchrony between the human brain's sleep clock and the environmental (sunlight) clock time. It’s not that you’re missing one hour of sleep on one day of the year.
Before DST your mind understands “7 am = the sun is up = you wake up.” After DST you must retrain your brain to think “7 am = the sun won’t be up for another hour = you still need to wake up.”
“So, when people change their sleep cycle voluntarily, for example on weekends, they go to bed a little later, and wake up a little later, it’s a very short-term self-made adjustment. Whereas, when DST happens, you're forced to make that change and not only you're forced to make that change that day when the time jumps, but you’re forced to maintain that change,” Vohra said.
If you’re having consistent issues with sleep, sleep medicine care teams treat issues like sleep apnea, insomnia, sleep walking or talking and more.
Learn more at healthcare.ascension.org.
-
IMPD officer charged after recording sexual acts in full uniform, voyeurism
An IMPD officer has been charged with voyeurism after allegedly recording sexual acts while in uniform with women without their consent to be on camera.‘13 FIRES’: One family’s story of resilience amid turmoil along Indiana Avenue
“13 FIRES” by Curtis K. Rogers tells the story of one family's resiliency while living along Indiana Avenue in 1956.Dominated by No.2 Ohio State for years, No. 5 Indiana has a chance for payback
If Indiana beats Ohio State and closes out the season with a win over Purdue, the Hoosiers will be in the Big Ten championship for the first time since the inception of the game in 2011.Preparing for the political chatter around the table on Thanksgiving
IU psychology professor Edward Hirt offers insight on navigating through this first big family get-together, since an historic and polarizing election.