TY - JOUR
T1 - Sleep and alertness in shift work disorder
T2 - findings of a field study
AU - Vanttola, Päivi
AU - Härmä, Mikko
AU - Viitasalo, Katriina
AU - Hublin, Christer
AU - Virkkala, Jussi
AU - Sallinen, Mikael
AU - Karhula, Kati
AU - Puttonen, Sampsa
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding The study was funded by the Finnish Work Environment Fund (111102) and NordForsk, the Nordic Program on Health and Welfare (74809).
Funding Information:
Conflict of interest Dr. Hublin reports outside the present work a grant from Finska Läkaresällskapet and from the Finnish Work Environment Fund, and personal fees from the National Institute of Health and Welfare and the Orion Corporation. The other authors have nothing to disclose.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018, The Author(s).
PY - 2019/5/1
Y1 - 2019/5/1
N2 - Purpose: Although shift work disorder (SWD) affects a major part of the shift working population, little is known about its manifestation in real life. This observational field study aimed to provide a detailed picture of sleep and alertness among shift workers with a questionnaire-based SWD, by comparing them to shift workers without SWD during work shifts and free time. Methods: SWD was determined by a questionnaire. Questionnaires and 3-week field monitoring, including sleep diaries, actigraphy, the Karolinska Sleepiness Scale (KSS), EEG-based sleep recordings, and Psychomotor Vigilance Tasks (PVT), were used to study 22 SWD cases and 9 non-SWD workers. Results: The SWD group had a shorter subjective total sleep time and greater sleep debt before morning shifts than the non-SWD group. Unlike the non-SWD group, the SWD group showed little compensatory sleep on days off. The SWD group had lower objective sleep efficiency and longer sleep latency on most days, and reported poorer relaxation at bedtime and sleep quality across all days than the non-SWD group. The SWD group’s average KSS-sleepiness was higher than the non-SWD group’s sleepiness at the beginning and end of morning shifts and at the end of night shifts. The SWD group also had more lapses in PVT at the beginning of night shifts than the non-SWD group. Conclusions: The results indicate that SWD is related to disturbed sleep and alertness in association with both morning and night shifts, and to less compensatory sleep on days off. SWD seems to particularly associate with the quality of sleep.
AB - Purpose: Although shift work disorder (SWD) affects a major part of the shift working population, little is known about its manifestation in real life. This observational field study aimed to provide a detailed picture of sleep and alertness among shift workers with a questionnaire-based SWD, by comparing them to shift workers without SWD during work shifts and free time. Methods: SWD was determined by a questionnaire. Questionnaires and 3-week field monitoring, including sleep diaries, actigraphy, the Karolinska Sleepiness Scale (KSS), EEG-based sleep recordings, and Psychomotor Vigilance Tasks (PVT), were used to study 22 SWD cases and 9 non-SWD workers. Results: The SWD group had a shorter subjective total sleep time and greater sleep debt before morning shifts than the non-SWD group. Unlike the non-SWD group, the SWD group showed little compensatory sleep on days off. The SWD group had lower objective sleep efficiency and longer sleep latency on most days, and reported poorer relaxation at bedtime and sleep quality across all days than the non-SWD group. The SWD group’s average KSS-sleepiness was higher than the non-SWD group’s sleepiness at the beginning and end of morning shifts and at the end of night shifts. The SWD group also had more lapses in PVT at the beginning of night shifts than the non-SWD group. Conclusions: The results indicate that SWD is related to disturbed sleep and alertness in association with both morning and night shifts, and to less compensatory sleep on days off. SWD seems to particularly associate with the quality of sleep.
KW - Circadian rhythm disorders
KW - Insomnia
KW - Shift work
KW - Sleep diary
KW - Sleepiness
U2 - 10.1007/s00420-018-1386-4
DO - 10.1007/s00420-018-1386-4
M3 - Article
C2 - 30511341
AN - SCOPUS:85058009694
SN - 0340-0131
VL - 92
SP - 523
EP - 533
JO - INTERNATIONAL ARCHIVES OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
JF - INTERNATIONAL ARCHIVES OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
IS - 4
ER -