Should Americans keep daylight saving time? — TiredThinker
Research shows it really confuses a person's internal clock, and has shown to significantly increase stroke and heart attack risk in older people. — TiredThinker
Is there any data on how many people die from strokes and heart attacks caused by unnatural time changes to a person's internal clock? — Sir2u
So should everyone else.Maybe Americans should stop flying all over the world — Sir2u
Another issue that could perhaps be taken with that argument is that people fly voluntarily, and in most cases, on vacation, so that they have a chance to recover from jet-lag, while people living under mandated time-changes have no choice and no time to recover. — Vera Mont
There are a few other side-effects. https://publichealth.jhu.edu/2023/7-things-to-know-about-daylight-saving-time — Vera Mont
I think that there are a lot of people flying because of business, and I would suppose that they are under some sort of pressure with little time to recover. — Sir2u
Well after reading that I would also suggest that all of the places that work on rotating shifts should also be stopped. — Sir2u
And that is wrong! — Vera Mont
Anybody sent abroad by their employer should be given time to recover from the flight before they're expected to carry out an assignment effectively. Smart employers already know this. — Vera Mont
Working in a capitalist economy is difficult and complicated enough, why make it worse by screwing with the clock? — Vera Mont
Rise in heart attacks and strokes
Every year, on the Monday after DST comes into effect, hospitals report a 24% spike in heart attack visits around the US.
Just a coincidence? Probably not. Doctors see an opposite trend each fall: The day after we turn back the clocks, heart attack visits drop 21% as many people enjoy a little extra pillow time.
As there is a forecast of about 10 billion people flying this year, probably about 5 billion will be non leisure. — Sir2u
This is probably true, but it does not explain the cause. there are various reports that suggest the entire effect can be attributed to disruptions in sleep patterns rather than changes in ambient light exposure or person's internal clock. — Sir2u
The disruption of sleep patterns is caused by messing with the clock - so, same difference. If you have the freedom to go to bed whenever you like, of course you could mitigate the effect of disruptive external pressures. But working people, especially working parents, rarely have that luxury.
DST doesn't bother me, since I'm long retired from a regimented working life and set my own hours of operation, according to my own biorhythms - as everyone should. — Vera Mont
Pastrami on rye awaited me. Imagine how difficult that was. — Hanover
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