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Wikipedia

Shift work

Shift work is an employment practice designed to keep a service or production line operational at all times. The practice typically sees the day divided into shifts, set periods of time during which different groups of workers perform their duties. The term "shift work" includes both long-term night shifts and work schedules in which employees change or rotate shifts.[1][2][3]

In medicine and epidemiology, shift work is considered a risk factor for some health problems in some individuals, as disruption to circadian rhythms may increase the probability of developing cardiovascular disease, cognitive impairment, diabetes, altered body composition[4] and obesity, among other conditions.[5][6]

History edit

The shift work system in modern industrial manufacturing originated in the late 18th century.

In 1867, Karl Marx wrote on the shift work system in Capital, Volume 1:

Capitalist production therefore drives, by its inherent nature, towards the appropriation of labour throughout the whole of the 24 hours in the day. But since it is physically impossible to exploit the same individual labour-power constantly, during the night as well as the day, capital has to overcome this physical obstacle. An alternation becomes necessary, between the labour-powers used up by day and those used up by night ... It is well known that this shift-system, this alternation of two sets of workers, predominated in the full-blooded springtime of the English cotton industry, and that at the present time it still flourishes, among other places, in the cotton-spinning factories of the Moscow gubernia. This 24-hour process of production exists today as a system in many of the as yet 'free' branches of industry in Great Britain, in the blast-furnaces, forges, rolling mills and other metallurgical establishments of England, Wales and Scotland.[7]

The Cromford Mill, starting from 1772, ran day and night with two twelve-hour shifts.[8]

Health effects edit

A video on the health effects of shift work

Shift work increases the risk for the development of many disorders. Shift work sleep disorder is a circadian rhythm sleep disorder characterized by insomnia, excessive sleepiness, or both. Shift work is considered essential for the diagnosis.[9] The risk of diabetes mellitus type 2 is increased in shift workers, especially men. People working rotating shifts are more vulnerable than others.[10]

Women whose work involves night shifts have a 48% increased risk of developing breast cancer.[11][12] This may be due to alterations in circadian rhythm: melatonin, a known tumor suppressor, is generally produced at night and late shifts may disrupt its production.[12] The WHO's International Agency for Research on Cancer listed "shift work that involves circadian disruption" as probably carcinogenic.[13][14] Shift work may also increase the risk of other types of cancer.[15] Working rotating shift work regularly during a two-year interval has been associated with a 9% increased the risk of early menopause compared to women who work no rotating shift work. The increased risk among rotating night shift workers was 25% among women predisposed to earlier menopause. Early menopause can lead to a host of other problems later in life.[16][17] A recent study, found that women who worked rotating night shifts for more than six years, eleven percent experienced a shortened lifespan. Women who worked rotating night shifts for more than 15 years also experienced a 25 percent higher risk of death due to lung cancer.[18]

Shift work also increases the risk of developing cluster headaches,[19] heart attacks,[20] fatigue, stress, sexual dysfunction,[21] depression,[22] dementia, obesity,[9] metabolic disorders, gastrointestinal disorders, musculoskeletal disorders, and reproductive disorders.[11]

 
Children going to a 12-hour night shift in the United States, 1908

Shift work also can worsen chronic diseases, including sleep disorders, digestive diseases, heart disease, hypertension, epilepsy, mental disorders, substance abuse, asthma, and any health conditions that are treated with medications affected by the circadian cycle.[11] Artificial lighting may additionally contribute to disturbed homeostasis.[23] Shift work may also increase a person's risk of smoking.[11]

The health consequences of shift work may depend on chronotype, that is, being a day person or a night person, and what shift a worker is assigned to. When individual chronotype is opposite of shift timing (day person working night shift), there is a greater risk of circadian rhythms disruption.[24] Nighttime workers sleep an average of one–four hours less than daytime workers.[25]

Different shift schedules will have different impacts on the health of a shift worker. The way the shift pattern is designed affects how shift workers sleep, eat and take holidays. Some shift patterns can exacerbate fatigue by limiting rest, increasing stress, overworking staff or disrupting their time off.[26]

Muscle health is also compromised by shift work: altered sleep and eating times, changes to appetite-regulating hormones and total energy expenditure, increased snacking and binge drinking, and reduced protein intake can contribute to negative protein balance, increases in insulin resistance and increases in body fat,[27] resulting in weight gain and more long-term health challenges.[28]

Compared with the day shift, injuries and accidents have been estimated to increase by 15% on evening shifts and 28% on night shifts. Longer shifts are also associated with more injuries and accidents: 10-hour shifts had 13% more and 12-hour shifts had 28% more than 8-hour shifts.[11] Other studies have shown a link between fatigue and workplace injuries and accidents. Workers with sleep deprivation are far more likely to be injured or involved in an accident.[9] Breaks reduce accident risks.[29]

One study suggests that, for those working a night shift (such as 23:00 to 07:00), it may be advantageous to sleep in the evening (14:00 to 22:00) rather than the morning (08:00 to 16:00). The study's evening sleep subjects had 37% fewer episodes of attentional impairment than the morning sleepers.[30]

There are four major determinants of cognitive performance and alertness in healthy shift-workers: circadian phase, sleep inertia, acute sleep deprivation and chronic sleep deficit.[31]

  • The circadian phase is relatively fixed in humans; attempting to shift it so that an individual is alert during the circadian bathyphase is difficult. Sleep during the day is shorter and less consolidated than night-time sleep.[9] Before a night shift, workers generally sleep less than before a day shift.[22]
  • The effects of sleep inertia wear off after two–four hours of wakefulness,[31] such that most workers who wake up in the morning and go to work suffer some degree of sleep inertia at the beginning of their shift. The relative effects of sleep inertia vs. the other factors are hard to quantify; however, the benefits of napping appear to outweigh the cost associated with sleep inertia.
  • Acute sleep deprivation occurs during long shifts with no breaks, as well as during night shifts when the worker sleeps in the morning and is awake during the afternoon, prior to the work shift. A night shift worker with poor daytime sleep may be awake for more than 18 hours by the end of his shift. The effects of acute sleep deprivation can be compared to impairment due to alcohol intoxication,[9] with 19 hours of wakefulness corresponding to a BAC of 0.05%, and 24 hours of wakefulness corresponding to a BAC of 0.10%.[11][32] Much of the effect of acute sleep deprivation can be countered by napping, with longer naps giving more benefit than shorter naps.[33] Some industries, specifically the fire service, have traditionally allowed workers to sleep while on duty, between calls for service. In one study of EMS providers, 24-hour shifts were not associated with a higher frequency of negative safety outcomes when compared to shorter shifts.[34]
  • Chronic sleep deficit occurs when a worker sleeps for fewer hours than is necessary over multiple days or weeks. The loss of two hours of nightly sleep for a week causes an impairment similar to those seen after 24 hours of wakefulness. After two weeks of such deficit, the lapses in performance are similar to those seen after 48 hours of continual wakefulness.[35] The number of shifts worked in a month by EMS providers was positively correlated with the frequency of reported errors and adverse events.[34]

Sleep assessment during shift work edit

A cross-sectional study investigated the relationship between several sleep assessment criteria and different shift work schedules (3-day, 6-day, 9-day and 21-day shift) and a control group of day shift work in Korean firefighters.[36] The results found that all shift work groups exhibited significant decreased total sleep time (TST) and decreased sleep efficiency in the night shift but efficiency increased in the rest day.[36] Between-group analysis of the different shift work groups revealed that day shift sleep efficiency was significantly higher in the 6-day shift while night shift sleep efficiency was significantly lower in the 21-day shift in comparison to other shift groups (p < 0.05).[36] Overall, night shift sleep quality was worse in shift workers than those who just worked the day shift, whereas 6-day shift provided better sleep quality compared to the 21-day shift.[36]

Safety and regulation edit

Shift work has been shown to negatively affect workers, and has been classified as a specific disorder (shift work sleep disorder). Circadian disruption by working at night causes symptoms like excessive sleepiness at work and sleep disturbances. Shift work sleep disorder also creates a greater risk for human error at work.[37] Shift work disrupts cognitive ability and flexibility and impairs attention, motivation, decision making, speech, vigilance, and overall performance.[9]

In order to mitigate the negative effects of shift work on safety and health, many countries have enacted regulations on shift work. The European Union, in its directive 2003/88/EC, has established a 48-hour limit on working time (including overtime) per week; a minimum rest period of 11 consecutive hours per 24-hour period; and a minimum uninterrupted rest period of 24 hours of mandated rest per week (which is in addition to the 11 hours of daily rest).[37][38] The EU directive also limits night work involving "special hazards or heavy physical or mental strain" to an average of eight hours in any 24-hour period.[37][38] The EU directive allows for limited derogations from the regulation, and special provisions allow longer working hours for transportation and offshore workers, fishing vessel workers, and doctors in training (see also medical resident work hours).[38]

Aircraft traffic flight controllers and pilots edit

For fewer operational errors, the FAA goal calls for Flight Controllers to be on duty for 5 to 6 hours per shift, with the remaining shift time devoted to meals and breaks.[39] For aircraft pilots, the actual time at the controls (flight time) is limited to 8 or 9 hours, depending on the time of day.[40][41]

Industrial disasters edit

Fatigue due to shift work has contributed to several industrial disasters, including the Three Mile Island accident, the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster and the Chernobyl disaster.[9] The Alaska Oil Spill Commission's final report on the Exxon Valdez oil spill disaster found that it was "conceivable" that excessive work hours contributed to crew fatigue, which in turn contributed to the vessel's running aground.[42]

Prevention edit

Management practices edit

 
4 o'clock shift at the Ford Motor Company assembly plant in Detroit, Michigan, 1910s

The practices and policies put in place by managers of round-the-clock or 24/7 operations can significantly influence shift worker alertness (and hence safety) and performance.[43][self-published source?]

Air traffic controllers typically work an 8-hour day, 5 days per week. Research has shown that when controllers remain "in position" for more than two hours, even at low traffic levels, performance can deteriorate rapidly, so they are typically placed "in position" for 30-minute intervals (with 30 minutes between intervals).

These practices and policies can include selecting an appropriate shift schedule or rota and using an employee scheduling software to maintain it, setting the length of shifts, managing overtime, increasing lighting levels, providing shift worker lifestyle training, retirement compensation based on salary in the last few years of employment (which can encourage excessive overtime among older workers who may be less able to obtain adequate sleep), or screening and hiring of new shift workers that assesses adaptability to a shift work schedule.[44] Mandating a minimum of 10 hours between shifts is an effective strategy to encourage adequate sleep for workers. Allowing frequent breaks and scheduling 8- or 10-hour shifts instead of 12-hour shifts can also minimize fatigue and help to mitigate the negative health effects of shift work.[11]

 
Miners waiting to go to work on the 4 P.M. to midnight shift at the Virginia-Pocahontas Coal Co., 1974

Multiple factors need to be considered when developing optimal shift work schedules, including shift timing, length, frequency and length of breaks during shifts, shift succession, worker commute time, as well as the mental and physical stress of the job.[45] Even though studies support 12-hour shifts are associated with increased occupational injuries and accident (higher rates with subsequent, successive shifts),[46] a synthesis of evidence cites the importance of all factors when considering the safety of a shift.[47]

Shift work was once characteristic primarily of the manufacturing industry, where it has a clear effect of increasing the use that can be made of capital equipment and allows for up to three times the production compared to just a day shift. It contrasts with the use of overtime to increase production at the margin. Both approaches incur higher wage costs. Although 2nd-shift worker efficiency levels are typically 3–5% below 1st shift, and 3rd shift 4–6% below 2nd shift, the productivity level, i.e. cost per employee, is often 25% to 40% lower on 2nd and 3rd shifts due to fixed costs which are "paid" by the first shift.[48]

Shift system edit

The 42-hour work-week allows for the most even distribution of work time. A 3:1 ratio of work days to days off is most effective for eight-hour shifts, and a 2:2 ratio of work days to days off is most effective for twelve-hour shifts.[49][50] Eight-hour shifts and twelve-hour shifts are common in manufacturing and health care. Twelve-hour shifts are also used with a very slow rotation in the petroleum industry. Twenty-four-hour shifts are common in health care and emergency services.[22]

Shift schedule and shift plan edit

The shift plan or rota is the central component of a shift schedule.[citation needed] The schedule includes considerations of shift overlap, shift change times and alignment with the clock, vacation, training, shift differentials, holidays, etc., whereas the shift plan determines the sequence of work and free days within a shift system.

Rotation of shifts can be fast, in which a worker changes shifts more than once a week, or slow, in which a worker changes shifts less than once a week. Rotation can also be forward, when a subsequent shift starts later, or backward, when a subsequent shift starts earlier.[22] Evidence supports forward rotating shifts are more adaptable for shift workers' circadian physiology.[45]

One main concern of shift workers is knowing their schedule more than two weeks at a time. Shift work is stressful. When on a rotating or ever changing shift, workers have to worry about daycare, personal appointments, and running their households. Many already work more than an eight-hour shift. Some evidence suggests giving employees schedules more than a month in advance would give proper notice and allow planning, their stress level would be reduced.[51]

Management edit

Though shift work itself remains necessary in many occupations, employers can alleviate some of the negative health consequences of shift work. The United States National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health recommends employers avoid quick shift changes and any rotating shift schedules should rotate forward. Employers should also attempt to minimize the number of consecutive night shifts, long work shifts and overtime work. A poor work environment can exacerbate the strain of shift work. Adequate lighting, clean air, proper heat and air conditioning, and reduced noise can all make shift work more bearable for workers.[52]

Good sleep hygiene is recommended.[11] This includes blocking out noise and light during sleep, maintaining a regular, predictable sleep routine, avoiding heavy foods and alcohol before sleep, and sleeping in a comfortable, cool environment. Alcohol consumption, caffeine consumption and heavy meals in the few hours before sleep can worsen shift work sleep disorders.[11][9] Exercise in the three hours before sleep can make it difficult to fall asleep.[11]

Free online training programs are available to educate workers and managers about the risks associated with shift work and strategies they can use to prevent these.[53]

Scheduling edit

 
A clock-based device for recording workers' working hours, from the beginning of 20 century. Exhibit of the National Polytechnical Museum in Sofia, Bulgaria

Algorithmic scheduling of shift work can lead to what has been colloquially termed as "clopening"[54] where the shift-worker has to work the closing shift of one day and the opening shift of the next day back-to-back resulting in short rest periods between shifts and fatigue. Co-opting employees to fill the shift roster helps to ensure that the human costs[55] are taken into account in a way which is hard for an algorithm to do as it would involve knowing the constraints and considerations of each individual shift worker and assigning a cost metric to each of those factors.[56] Shift based hiring which is a recruitment concept that hires people for individual shifts, rather than hiring employees before scheduling them into shifts enables shift workers to indicate their preferences and availability for unfilled shifts through a shift-bidding mechanism. Through this process, the shift hours are evened out by human-driven market mechanism rather than an algorithmic process. This openness can lead to work hours that are tailored to an individual's lifestyle and schedule while ensuring that shifts are optimally filled, in contrast to the generally poor human outcomes of fatigue, stress, estrangement with friends and family and health problems that have been reported with algorithm-based scheduling of work-shifts.[57][58]

Mental (cognitive) fatigue due to inadequate sleep an/or disturbances of circadian rhythms is a common contributor to accidents and untoward incidents.[59] While this risk cannot be eliminated, it can be managed through personal and administrative controls. This type of management is conducted through a Fatigue Risk Management System (FRMS).[60][61] One method used within an FRMS is objective fatigue modeling to predict periods of high risk within a 24-hour shift plan.

Missing income is also a large part of shift worker. Several companies run twenty-four hour shifts. Most of the work is done during the day. When the work dries up, it usually is the second and third shift workers who pay the price. They are told to punch out early or use paid time off if they have any to make up the difference in their paychecks. That practice costs the average worker $92.00 a month.[62]

Medications edit

Melatonin may increase sleep length during both daytime and nighttime sleep in people who work night shifts. Zopiclone has also been investigated as a potential treatment, but it is unclear if it is effective in increasing daytime sleep time in shift workers. There are, however, no reports of adverse effects.[37]

Modafinil and R-modafinil are useful to improve alertness and reduce sleepiness in shift workers.[37][63] Modafinil has a low risk of abuse compared to other similar agents.[64] However, 10% more participants reported adverse effects (nausea and headache) while taking modafinil. In post-marketing surveillance, modafinil was associated with Stevens–Johnson syndrome. The European Medicines Agency withdrew the license for modafinil for shift workers for the European market because it judged that the benefits did not outweigh the adverse effects.[37]

Using caffeine and naps before night shifts can decrease sleepiness. Caffeine has also been shown to reduce errors made by shift workers.[37]

Epidemiology edit

 
Worker Health Charts provides a distribution of shift work by industry from 2015 NHIS data.[65]

According to data from the National Health Interview Survey and the Occupational Health Supplement, 27% of all U.S. workers in 2015 worked an alternative shift (not a regular day shift) and 7% frequently worked a night shift. Prevalence rates were higher for workers aged 18–29 compared to other ages. Those with an education level beyond high school had a lower prevalence rate of alternative shifts compared to workers with less education. Among all occupations, protective service occupations had the highest prevalence of working an alternative shift (54%).[66]

One of the ways in which working alternative shifts can impair health is through decreasing sleep opportunities. Among all workers, those who usually worked the night shift had a much higher prevalence of short sleep duration (44.0%, representing approximately 2.2 million night shift workers) than those who worked the day shift (28.8%, representing approximately 28.3 million day shift workers). An especially high prevalence of short sleep duration was reported by night shift workers in the transportation and warehousing (69.7%) and health-care and social assistance (52.3%) industries.[67]

Industries edit

It is estimated that 15-20% of workers in industrialized countries are employed in shift work.[9] Shift work is common in the transportation sector as well. Some of the earliest instances appeared with the railroads, where freight trains have clear tracks to run on at night.

Shift work is also the norm in fields related to public protection and healthcare, such as law enforcement, emergency medical services, firefighting, security and hospitals. Shift work is a contributing factor in many cases of medical errors.[9] Shift work has often been common in the armed forces. Military personnel, pilots, and others that regularly change time zones while performing shift work experience jet lag and consequently suffer sleep disorders.[9]

Those in the field of meteorology, such as the National Weather Service and private forecasting companies, also use shift work, as constant monitoring of the weather is necessary. Much of the Internet services and telecommunication industry relies on shift work to maintain worldwide operations and uptime.

Service industries now increasingly operate on some shift system; for example a restaurant or convenience store will normally be open on most days for much longer than a working day.

There are many industries requiring 24/7 coverage that employ workers on a shift basis, including:

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Pati, A.K., Chandrawanshi, A. & Reinberg, A. (2001) 'Shift work: consequences and management'. Current Science, 81(1), 32–52.
  • Knutsson, Anders; Jonsson, BjornG.; Akerstedt, Torbjorn; Orth-Gomer, Kristina (July 1986). "Increased risk of ischaemic heart disease in shift workers". The Lancet. 328 (8498): 89–92. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(86)91619-3. PMID 2873389. S2CID 21921096.
  • Burr, Douglas Scott (2009) 'The Schedule Book', 'ISBN 978-1-4392-2674-2'.
  • Cooper, Brian (1983), Transformation of a Valley: The Derbyshire Derwent (New, Scarthin 1997 Reprint ed.), London: Heinemann, ISBN 0-907758-17-7

External links edit

  • Shift work and health, Issue Briefing, Institute for Work & Health, April 2010.
  • Scientific Symposium on the Health Effects of Shift Work, Toronto, 12 April 2010, hosted by the Occupational Cancer Research Centre and the Institute for Work & Health (IWH).
  • CDC - Work Schedules: Shift Work and Long Work Hours - NIOSH Workplace Safety and Health Topic
  • , For a crew of three on a small boat at sea
  • Working Time Society, a global research society addressing questions of working time and shift-work with biannual symposia.
  • Consensus papers regarding Health, ... and Shiftwork (2019) of the ICOH-Scientific Committee on Shiftwork and Working Time and the Working Time Society

shift, work, other, uses, disambiguation, second, shift, redirects, here, concept, sociology, double, burden, shifts, redirects, here, confused, with, shift, working, nights, redirects, here, album, working, week, working, nights, album, this, article, lend, u. For other uses see Shift work disambiguation Second shift redirects here For the concept in sociology see double burden Day shifts redirects here Not to be confused with Day Shift Working nights redirects here For the album by Working Week see Working Nights album This article may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help improve it by rewriting it in a balanced fashion that contextualizes different points of view March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Shift work is an employment practice designed to keep a service or production line operational at all times The practice typically sees the day divided into shifts set periods of time during which different groups of workers perform their duties The term shift work includes both long term night shifts and work schedules in which employees change or rotate shifts 1 2 3 In medicine and epidemiology shift work is considered a risk factor for some health problems in some individuals as disruption to circadian rhythms may increase the probability of developing cardiovascular disease cognitive impairment diabetes altered body composition 4 and obesity among other conditions 5 6 Contents 1 History 2 Health effects 3 Sleep assessment during shift work 4 Safety and regulation 4 1 Aircraft traffic flight controllers and pilots 4 2 Industrial disasters 5 Prevention 5 1 Management practices 5 2 Shift system 5 3 Shift schedule and shift plan 6 Management 6 1 Scheduling 6 2 Medications 7 Epidemiology 8 Industries 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory editThe shift work system in modern industrial manufacturing originated in the late 18th century In 1867 Karl Marx wrote on the shift work system in Capital Volume 1 Capitalist production therefore drives by its inherent nature towards the appropriation of labour throughout the whole of the 24 hours in the day But since it is physically impossible to exploit the same individual labour power constantly during the night as well as the day capital has to overcome this physical obstacle An alternation becomes necessary between the labour powers used up by day and those used up by night It is well known that this shift system this alternation of two sets of workers predominated in the full blooded springtime of the English cotton industry and that at the present time it still flourishes among other places in the cotton spinning factories of the Moscow gubernia This 24 hour process of production exists today as a system in many of the as yet free branches of industry in Great Britain in the blast furnaces forges rolling mills and other metallurgical establishments of England Wales and Scotland 7 The Cromford Mill starting from 1772 ran day and night with two twelve hour shifts 8 Health effects editMain article Shift work sleep disorder source source source source source source source source A video on the health effects of shift work Shift work increases the risk for the development of many disorders Shift work sleep disorder is a circadian rhythm sleep disorder characterized by insomnia excessive sleepiness or both Shift work is considered essential for the diagnosis 9 The risk of diabetes mellitus type 2 is increased in shift workers especially men People working rotating shifts are more vulnerable than others 10 Women whose work involves night shifts have a 48 increased risk of developing breast cancer 11 12 This may be due to alterations in circadian rhythm melatonin a known tumor suppressor is generally produced at night and late shifts may disrupt its production 12 The WHO s International Agency for Research on Cancer listed shift work that involves circadian disruption as probably carcinogenic 13 14 Shift work may also increase the risk of other types of cancer 15 Working rotating shift work regularly during a two year interval has been associated with a 9 increased the risk of early menopause compared to women who work no rotating shift work The increased risk among rotating night shift workers was 25 among women predisposed to earlier menopause Early menopause can lead to a host of other problems later in life 16 17 A recent study found that women who worked rotating night shifts for more than six years eleven percent experienced a shortened lifespan Women who worked rotating night shifts for more than 15 years also experienced a 25 percent higher risk of death due to lung cancer 18 Shift work also increases the risk of developing cluster headaches 19 heart attacks 20 fatigue stress sexual dysfunction 21 depression 22 dementia obesity 9 metabolic disorders gastrointestinal disorders musculoskeletal disorders and reproductive disorders 11 nbsp Children going to a 12 hour night shift in the United States 1908 Shift work also can worsen chronic diseases including sleep disorders digestive diseases heart disease hypertension epilepsy mental disorders substance abuse asthma and any health conditions that are treated with medications affected by the circadian cycle 11 Artificial lighting may additionally contribute to disturbed homeostasis 23 Shift work may also increase a person s risk of smoking 11 The health consequences of shift work may depend on chronotype that is being a day person or a night person and what shift a worker is assigned to When individual chronotype is opposite of shift timing day person working night shift there is a greater risk of circadian rhythms disruption 24 Nighttime workers sleep an average of one four hours less than daytime workers 25 Different shift schedules will have different impacts on the health of a shift worker The way the shift pattern is designed affects how shift workers sleep eat and take holidays Some shift patterns can exacerbate fatigue by limiting rest increasing stress overworking staff or disrupting their time off 26 Muscle health is also compromised by shift work altered sleep and eating times changes to appetite regulating hormones and total energy expenditure increased snacking and binge drinking and reduced protein intake can contribute to negative protein balance increases in insulin resistance and increases in body fat 27 resulting in weight gain and more long term health challenges 28 Main article Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance Compared with the day shift injuries and accidents have been estimated to increase by 15 on evening shifts and 28 on night shifts Longer shifts are also associated with more injuries and accidents 10 hour shifts had 13 more and 12 hour shifts had 28 more than 8 hour shifts 11 Other studies have shown a link between fatigue and workplace injuries and accidents Workers with sleep deprivation are far more likely to be injured or involved in an accident 9 Breaks reduce accident risks 29 One study suggests that for those working a night shift such as 23 00 to 07 00 it may be advantageous to sleep in the evening 14 00 to 22 00 rather than the morning 08 00 to 16 00 The study s evening sleep subjects had 37 fewer episodes of attentional impairment than the morning sleepers 30 There are four major determinants of cognitive performance and alertness in healthy shift workers circadian phase sleep inertia acute sleep deprivation and chronic sleep deficit 31 The circadian phase is relatively fixed in humans attempting to shift it so that an individual is alert during the circadian bathyphase is difficult Sleep during the day is shorter and less consolidated than night time sleep 9 Before a night shift workers generally sleep less than before a day shift 22 The effects of sleep inertia wear off after two four hours of wakefulness 31 such that most workers who wake up in the morning and go to work suffer some degree of sleep inertia at the beginning of their shift The relative effects of sleep inertia vs the other factors are hard to quantify however the benefits of napping appear to outweigh the cost associated with sleep inertia Acute sleep deprivation occurs during long shifts with no breaks as well as during night shifts when the worker sleeps in the morning and is awake during the afternoon prior to the work shift A night shift worker with poor daytime sleep may be awake for more than 18 hours by the end of his shift The effects of acute sleep deprivation can be compared to impairment due to alcohol intoxication 9 with 19 hours of wakefulness corresponding to a BAC of 0 05 and 24 hours of wakefulness corresponding to a BAC of 0 10 11 32 Much of the effect of acute sleep deprivation can be countered by napping with longer naps giving more benefit than shorter naps 33 Some industries specifically the fire service have traditionally allowed workers to sleep while on duty between calls for service In one study of EMS providers 24 hour shifts were not associated with a higher frequency of negative safety outcomes when compared to shorter shifts 34 Chronic sleep deficit occurs when a worker sleeps for fewer hours than is necessary over multiple days or weeks The loss of two hours of nightly sleep for a week causes an impairment similar to those seen after 24 hours of wakefulness After two weeks of such deficit the lapses in performance are similar to those seen after 48 hours of continual wakefulness 35 The number of shifts worked in a month by EMS providers was positively correlated with the frequency of reported errors and adverse events 34 Sleep assessment during shift work editA cross sectional study investigated the relationship between several sleep assessment criteria and different shift work schedules 3 day 6 day 9 day and 21 day shift and a control group of day shift work in Korean firefighters 36 The results found that all shift work groups exhibited significant decreased total sleep time TST and decreased sleep efficiency in the night shift but efficiency increased in the rest day 36 Between group analysis of the different shift work groups revealed that day shift sleep efficiency was significantly higher in the 6 day shift while night shift sleep efficiency was significantly lower in the 21 day shift in comparison to other shift groups p lt 0 05 36 Overall night shift sleep quality was worse in shift workers than those who just worked the day shift whereas 6 day shift provided better sleep quality compared to the 21 day shift 36 Safety and regulation editShift work has been shown to negatively affect workers and has been classified as a specific disorder shift work sleep disorder Circadian disruption by working at night causes symptoms like excessive sleepiness at work and sleep disturbances Shift work sleep disorder also creates a greater risk for human error at work 37 Shift work disrupts cognitive ability and flexibility and impairs attention motivation decision making speech vigilance and overall performance 9 In order to mitigate the negative effects of shift work on safety and health many countries have enacted regulations on shift work The European Union in its directive 2003 88 EC has established a 48 hour limit on working time including overtime per week a minimum rest period of 11 consecutive hours per 24 hour period and a minimum uninterrupted rest period of 24 hours of mandated rest per week which is in addition to the 11 hours of daily rest 37 38 The EU directive also limits night work involving special hazards or heavy physical or mental strain to an average of eight hours in any 24 hour period 37 38 The EU directive allows for limited derogations from the regulation and special provisions allow longer working hours for transportation and offshore workers fishing vessel workers and doctors in training see also medical resident work hours 38 Aircraft traffic flight controllers and pilots edit For fewer operational errors the FAA goal calls for Flight Controllers to be on duty for 5 to 6 hours per shift with the remaining shift time devoted to meals and breaks 39 For aircraft pilots the actual time at the controls flight time is limited to 8 or 9 hours depending on the time of day 40 41 Industrial disasters edit Fatigue due to shift work has contributed to several industrial disasters including the Three Mile Island accident the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster and the Chernobyl disaster 9 The Alaska Oil Spill Commission s final report on the Exxon Valdez oil spill disaster found that it was conceivable that excessive work hours contributed to crew fatigue which in turn contributed to the vessel s running aground 42 Prevention editManagement practices edit nbsp 4 o clock shift at the Ford Motor Company assembly plant in Detroit Michigan 1910s The practices and policies put in place by managers of round the clock or 24 7 operations can significantly influence shift worker alertness and hence safety and performance 43 self published source Air traffic controllers typically work an 8 hour day 5 days per week Research has shown that when controllers remain in position for more than two hours even at low traffic levels performance can deteriorate rapidly so they are typically placed in position for 30 minute intervals with 30 minutes between intervals These practices and policies can include selecting an appropriate shift schedule or rota and using an employee scheduling software to maintain it setting the length of shifts managing overtime increasing lighting levels providing shift worker lifestyle training retirement compensation based on salary in the last few years of employment which can encourage excessive overtime among older workers who may be less able to obtain adequate sleep or screening and hiring of new shift workers that assesses adaptability to a shift work schedule 44 Mandating a minimum of 10 hours between shifts is an effective strategy to encourage adequate sleep for workers Allowing frequent breaks and scheduling 8 or 10 hour shifts instead of 12 hour shifts can also minimize fatigue and help to mitigate the negative health effects of shift work 11 nbsp Miners waiting to go to work on the 4 P M to midnight shift at the Virginia Pocahontas Coal Co 1974 Multiple factors need to be considered when developing optimal shift work schedules including shift timing length frequency and length of breaks during shifts shift succession worker commute time as well as the mental and physical stress of the job 45 Even though studies support 12 hour shifts are associated with increased occupational injuries and accident higher rates with subsequent successive shifts 46 a synthesis of evidence cites the importance of all factors when considering the safety of a shift 47 Shift work was once characteristic primarily of the manufacturing industry where it has a clear effect of increasing the use that can be made of capital equipment and allows for up to three times the production compared to just a day shift It contrasts with the use of overtime to increase production at the margin Both approaches incur higher wage costs Although 2nd shift worker efficiency levels are typically 3 5 below 1st shift and 3rd shift 4 6 below 2nd shift the productivity level i e cost per employee is often 25 to 40 lower on 2nd and 3rd shifts due to fixed costs which are paid by the first shift 48 Shift system edit The 42 hour work week allows for the most even distribution of work time A 3 1 ratio of work days to days off is most effective for eight hour shifts and a 2 2 ratio of work days to days off is most effective for twelve hour shifts 49 50 Eight hour shifts and twelve hour shifts are common in manufacturing and health care Twelve hour shifts are also used with a very slow rotation in the petroleum industry Twenty four hour shifts are common in health care and emergency services 22 Shift schedule and shift plan edit Main article Shift plan The shift plan or rota is the central component of a shift schedule citation needed The schedule includes considerations of shift overlap shift change times and alignment with the clock vacation training shift differentials holidays etc whereas the shift plan determines the sequence of work and free days within a shift system Rotation of shifts can be fast in which a worker changes shifts more than once a week or slow in which a worker changes shifts less than once a week Rotation can also be forward when a subsequent shift starts later or backward when a subsequent shift starts earlier 22 Evidence supports forward rotating shifts are more adaptable for shift workers circadian physiology 45 One main concern of shift workers is knowing their schedule more than two weeks at a time Shift work is stressful When on a rotating or ever changing shift workers have to worry about daycare personal appointments and running their households Many already work more than an eight hour shift Some evidence suggests giving employees schedules more than a month in advance would give proper notice and allow planning their stress level would be reduced 51 Management editThough shift work itself remains necessary in many occupations employers can alleviate some of the negative health consequences of shift work The United States National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health recommends employers avoid quick shift changes and any rotating shift schedules should rotate forward Employers should also attempt to minimize the number of consecutive night shifts long work shifts and overtime work A poor work environment can exacerbate the strain of shift work Adequate lighting clean air proper heat and air conditioning and reduced noise can all make shift work more bearable for workers 52 Good sleep hygiene is recommended 11 This includes blocking out noise and light during sleep maintaining a regular predictable sleep routine avoiding heavy foods and alcohol before sleep and sleeping in a comfortable cool environment Alcohol consumption caffeine consumption and heavy meals in the few hours before sleep can worsen shift work sleep disorders 11 9 Exercise in the three hours before sleep can make it difficult to fall asleep 11 Free online training programs are available to educate workers and managers about the risks associated with shift work and strategies they can use to prevent these 53 Scheduling edit Main article Shift based hiring nbsp A clock based device for recording workers working hours from the beginning of 20 century Exhibit of the National Polytechnical Museum in Sofia Bulgaria Algorithmic scheduling of shift work can lead to what has been colloquially termed as clopening 54 where the shift worker has to work the closing shift of one day and the opening shift of the next day back to back resulting in short rest periods between shifts and fatigue Co opting employees to fill the shift roster helps to ensure that the human costs 55 are taken into account in a way which is hard for an algorithm to do as it would involve knowing the constraints and considerations of each individual shift worker and assigning a cost metric to each of those factors 56 Shift based hiring which is a recruitment concept that hires people for individual shifts rather than hiring employees before scheduling them into shifts enables shift workers to indicate their preferences and availability for unfilled shifts through a shift bidding mechanism Through this process the shift hours are evened out by human driven market mechanism rather than an algorithmic process This openness can lead to work hours that are tailored to an individual s lifestyle and schedule while ensuring that shifts are optimally filled in contrast to the generally poor human outcomes of fatigue stress estrangement with friends and family and health problems that have been reported with algorithm based scheduling of work shifts 57 58 Mental cognitive fatigue due to inadequate sleep an or disturbances of circadian rhythms is a common contributor to accidents and untoward incidents 59 While this risk cannot be eliminated it can be managed through personal and administrative controls This type of management is conducted through a Fatigue Risk Management System FRMS 60 61 One method used within an FRMS is objective fatigue modeling to predict periods of high risk within a 24 hour shift plan Missing income is also a large part of shift worker Several companies run twenty four hour shifts Most of the work is done during the day When the work dries up it usually is the second and third shift workers who pay the price They are told to punch out early or use paid time off if they have any to make up the difference in their paychecks That practice costs the average worker 92 00 a month 62 Medications edit Melatonin may increase sleep length during both daytime and nighttime sleep in people who work night shifts Zopiclone has also been investigated as a potential treatment but it is unclear if it is effective in increasing daytime sleep time in shift workers There are however no reports of adverse effects 37 Modafinil and R modafinil are useful to improve alertness and reduce sleepiness in shift workers 37 63 Modafinil has a low risk of abuse compared to other similar agents 64 However 10 more participants reported adverse effects nausea and headache while taking modafinil In post marketing surveillance modafinil was associated with Stevens Johnson syndrome The European Medicines Agency withdrew the license for modafinil for shift workers for the European market because it judged that the benefits did not outweigh the adverse effects 37 Using caffeine and naps before night shifts can decrease sleepiness Caffeine has also been shown to reduce errors made by shift workers 37 Epidemiology edit nbsp Worker Health Charts provides a distribution of shift work by industry from 2015 NHIS data 65 According to data from the National Health Interview Survey and the Occupational Health Supplement 27 of all U S workers in 2015 worked an alternative shift not a regular day shift and 7 frequently worked a night shift Prevalence rates were higher for workers aged 18 29 compared to other ages Those with an education level beyond high school had a lower prevalence rate of alternative shifts compared to workers with less education Among all occupations protective service occupations had the highest prevalence of working an alternative shift 54 66 One of the ways in which working alternative shifts can impair health is through decreasing sleep opportunities Among all workers those who usually worked the night shift had a much higher prevalence of short sleep duration 44 0 representing approximately 2 2 million night shift workers than those who worked the day shift 28 8 representing approximately 28 3 million day shift workers An especially high prevalence of short sleep duration was reported by night shift workers in the transportation and warehousing 69 7 and health care and social assistance 52 3 industries 67 Industries editIt is estimated that 15 20 of workers in industrialized countries are employed in shift work 9 Shift work is common in the transportation sector as well Some of the earliest instances appeared with the railroads where freight trains have clear tracks to run on at night Shift work is also the norm in fields related to public protection and healthcare such as law enforcement emergency medical services firefighting security and hospitals Shift work is a contributing factor in many cases of medical errors 9 Shift work has often been common in the armed forces Military personnel pilots and others that regularly change time zones while performing shift work experience jet lag and consequently suffer sleep disorders 9 Those in the field of meteorology such as the National Weather Service and private forecasting companies also use shift work as constant monitoring of the weather is necessary Much of the Internet services and telecommunication industry relies on shift work to maintain worldwide operations and uptime Service industries now increasingly operate on some shift system for example a restaurant or convenience store will normally be open on most days for much longer than a working day There are many industries requiring 24 7 coverage that employ workers on a shift basis including Caregiver Direct support professional Customer service including call centers Data center and IT Operations Death care medical examiner or coroner Emergency services Police Firefighting Emergency medical services Entertainment Casino workers Health care Funeral workers Hospitality Logistics amp transportation Railways Ship Crew Manufacturing Flight Test Military Mining Public utilities Nuclear power Fossil fuel Solar wind and hydro power Retail Telecommunications Television Radio broadcasting Security WeatherSee also edit nbsp Organized labour portal Effects of overtime Fatigue Avoidance Scheduling Tool Gantt chart Occupational Cancer Sleep Split shiftReferences edit Sloan Work amp Family Research Boston College Shift work Definition s of Retrieved 2014 09 25 Institute for Work amp Health Ontario Canada 2010 Shift work and health Retrieved 2018 08 05 employment with anything other than a regular daytime work schedule a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link U S Congress Office of Technology Assessment 1991 Biological Rhythms Implications for the Worker Sooriyaarachchi P Jayawardena R Pavey T King N Shift work and body composition a systematic review and meta analysis Minerva Endocrinology 2021 Jun https doi org 10 23736 s2724 6507 21 03534 x Delezie J Challet E 2011 Interactions between metabolism and circadian clocks reciprocal disturbances Ann N Y Acad Sci 1243 1 30 46 Bibcode 2011NYASA1243 30D doi 10 1111 j 1749 6632 2011 06246 x PMID 22211891 S2CID 43621902 Scheer FA Hilton MF Mantzoros CS Shea SA 2009 Adverse metabolic and cardiovascular consequences of circadian misalignment Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 106 11 4453 8 Bibcode 2009PNAS 106 4453S doi 10 1073 pnas 0808180106 PMC 2657421 PMID 19255424 Marx Karl The Working Day Capital Volume 1 1867 Cooper 1983 p 68 a b c d e f g h i j k Ker Katharine Edwards Philip James Felix Lambert M Blackhall Karen Roberts Ian 2010 Caffeine for the prevention of injuries and errors in shift workers The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2010 5 CD008508 doi 10 1002 14651858 CD008508 ISSN 1469 493X PMC 4160007 PMID 20464765 Yong Gan 2014 Shift work and diabetes mellitus a meta analysis of observational studies Occupational and Environmental Medicine 72 1 72 78 doi 10 1136 oemed 2014 102150 PMID 25030030 Retrieved 11 August 2014 a b c d e f g h i j Caruso Claire C August 2 2012 Running on Empty Fatigue and Healthcare Professionals NIOSH Workplace Safety and Health Medscape and NIOSH a b Megdal S P Kroenke C H Laden F Pukkala E Schernhammer E S 2005 Night work and breast cancer risk A systematic review and meta analysis European Journal of Cancer 41 13 2023 2032 doi 10 1016 j ejca 2005 05 010 PMID 16084719 IARC Press release No 180 Archived 2008 04 11 at the Wayback Machine WNPR Connecticut Public Radio The health of night shift workers Connecticut Public Radio WNPR Retrieved 2007 11 30 Parent M E El Zein M Rousseau M C Pintos J Siemiatycki J 2012 Night Work and the Risk of Cancer Among Men American Journal of Epidemiology 176 9 751 759 doi 10 1093 aje kws318 PMID 23035019 Stock D Knight J A Raboud J Cotterchio M Strohmaier S Willett W Eliassen A H Rosner B Hankinson S E Schernhammer E 2019 03 01 Women who work nights are 9 more likely to have an early menopause Human Reproduction 34 3 539 548 doi 10 1093 humrep dey390 PMC 7210710 PMID 30753548 Stock D Hankinson S E Rosner B Eliassen A H Willett W Strohmaier S Cotterchio M Raboud J Knight J A Schernhammer E 2019 03 01 Rotating night shift work and menopausal age Human Reproduction 34 3 539 548 doi 10 1093 humrep dey390 ISSN 0268 1161 PMC 7210710 PMID 30753548 Why Working The Night Shift Has Major Health Consequences HuffPost 2015 01 06 Retrieved 2019 03 09 Beck E Sieber W J Trejo R 2005 Management of cluster headache American Family 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10 1002 14651858 CD009776 pub2 PMC 10025070 PMID 25113164 a b c Directive 2003 88 EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 4 November 2003 concerning certain aspects of the organisation of working time Beth Kassab 2006 Mistakes increase at airport An incident involving 2 jets at Orlando International focuses attention on air traffic errors Knight Ridder Tribune ProQuest 461319088 Flightcrew Member Duty and Rest Requirements The Federal Register 2012 ProQuest 913496666 G Brogmus G W Maynard 2006 Safer shiftwork through more effective scheduling Occupational Hazards 52 54 ProQuest 213685199 Final Report Spill The Wreck of the Exxon Valdez Implications for Safe Transportation of Oil Alaska Oil Spill Commission February 1990 Miller JC 2013 Fundamentals of Shiftwork Scheduling 3rd Edition Fixing Stupid Smashwords Five Foundations For A Fair Physician Schedule Intrigma Inc Archived from the original on 2016 08 12 Retrieved 2016 07 18 a b Knauth Peter Hornberger Sonia 2003 03 01 Preventive and compensatory measures for shift workers Occupational Medicine 53 2 109 116 doi 10 1093 occmed kqg049 ISSN 0962 7480 PMID 12637595 Folkard Simon Lombardi David A 2006 11 01 Modeling the impact of the components of long work hours on injuries and accidents American Journal of Industrial Medicine 49 11 953 963 doi 10 1002 ajim 20307 ISSN 1097 0274 PMID 16570251 S2CID 10927108 Philip Tucker 2012 Working time health and safety a research synthesis paper Folkard Simon International Labour Office Geneva ILO ISBN 9789221260615 OCLC 795699411 Alan Blinder and William Baumol 1993 Economics Principles and Policy Harcourt Brace Jovanovich San Diego p 687 Knauth P Rohmert W Rutenfranz J March 1979 Systematic selection of shift plans for continuous production with the aid of work physiological criteria Applied Ergonomics 10 1 9 15 doi 10 1016 0003 6870 79 90003 6 PMID 15676345 Rutenfranz J Knauth P Colquhoun W May 1976 Hours of work and shiftwork Ergonomics 19 3 331 340 doi 10 1080 00140137608931549 PMID 976239 pierce 2016 08 29 Keeping it Balanced The Art of Scheduling Rotating Shifts Mitrefinch Retrieved 2019 03 03 Roger R Rosa Michael J Colligan July 1997 Plain Language About Shiftwork PDF Cincinnati Ohio National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Archived from the original PDF on 2012 09 21 CDC Work Schedules Shift Work and Long Hours NIOSH Workplace Safety and Health Topic www cdc gov 2018 07 06 Retrieved 2016 06 13 The Clopening Shift May Soon Be a Thing of the Past Boston com Retrieved 3 February 2016 WSMH PDF http ewh ieee org conf hfpp presentations 27 pdf bare URL PDF Greenhouse Steven 22 February 2015 In Service Sector No Rest for the Working The New York Times Retrieved 3 February 2016 Starbucks Clopening Practices Deemed Inexcusable Forbes 19 August 2014 Retrieved 3 February 2016 Miller James C 2013 Anatomy of a Fatigue Related Accident Smashwords ISBN 9781310879265 Fatigue Risk management Fatigue Risk management Control Room Management Fatigue Mitigation PHMSA Nonstandard work schedules over the life course A first look PDF Morgenthaler TI Lee Chiong T Alessi C Friedman L Aurora RN Boehlecke B Brown T Chesson AL Jr Kapur V Maganti R Owens J Pancer J Swick TJ Zak R Standards of Practice Committee of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine Nov 2007 Practice parameters for the clinical evaluation and treatment of circadian rhythm sleep disorders An American Academy of Sleep Medicine report Sleep 30 11 1445 59 doi 10 1093 sleep 30 11 1445 PMC 2082098 PMID 18041479 Wisor Jonathan 2013 Modafinil as a Catecholaminergic Agent Empirical Evidence and Unanswered Questions Frontiers in Neurology 4 139 doi 10 3389 fneur 2013 00139 PMC 3791559 PMID 24109471 CDC NIOSH Worker Health Charts wwwn cdc gov Retrieved 2019 04 08 CDC NIOSH Worker Health Charts Centers for Disease Control and Prevention April 27 2012 Short sleep duration among workers United States 2010 MMWR 61 16 281 285 PMID 22534760 Further reading editPati A K Chandrawanshi A amp Reinberg A 2001 Shift work consequences and management Current Science 81 1 32 52 Knutsson Anders Jonsson BjornG Akerstedt Torbjorn Orth Gomer Kristina July 1986 Increased risk of ischaemic heart disease in shift workers The Lancet 328 8498 89 92 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 86 91619 3 PMID 2873389 S2CID 21921096 Burr Douglas Scott 2009 The Schedule Book ISBN 978 1 4392 2674 2 Cooper Brian 1983 Transformation of a Valley The Derbyshire Derwent New Scarthin 1997 Reprint ed London Heinemann ISBN 0 907758 17 7External links editShift work and health Issue Briefing Institute for Work amp Health April 2010 Scientific Symposium on the Health Effects of Shift Work Toronto 12 April 2010 hosted by the Occupational Cancer Research Centre and the Institute for Work amp Health IWH CDC Work Schedules Shift Work and Long Work Hours NIOSH Workplace Safety and Health Topic Three hour night shift system For a crew of three on a small boat at sea Working Time Society a global research society addressing questions of working time and shift work with biannual symposia Consensus papers regarding Health and Shiftwork 2019 of the ICOH Scientific Committee on Shiftwork and Working Time and the Working Time Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shift work amp oldid 1201608719, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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