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Fall Back, Sleep In! Your Guide to daylight saving time 2024
Hey sleep lovers! Get ready, because on Sunday, November 3rd, at 2:00 a.m., we're "falling back" – meaning we gain an hour of sleep! Daylight Saving Time (DST) 2024 ends, putting a close on 238 days of altered clocks which involved those longer days and shorter nights for our sleep. This all goes way back; those days involve extended daylight hours. So, how does that impact your sleep? The truth is this changes the rhythm that most people operate on.
While that extra hour might sound amazing, experts have shown how the time shift can seriously mess with our bodies' natural clock, our circadian rhythm. The change creates challenges impacting sleep; and this affects pretty much every aspect of your daily life including concentration, mood and alertness. While the "fall back" usually isn't as bad as the spring time change (when we lose an hour and are far more tired after losing those crucial moments to our day's rhythm!), that gained hour won’t magically fix a chronic sleep deficit, especially those already experiencing issues related to sleep quality and insufficient hours. Many simply suffer and sleep inadequately for days!
Those time shifts can actually disrupt sleep patterns pretty consistently; impacting people whether the clocks “spring forward” or “fall back”. Although this might seem like obvious trivia for most readers, it does explain what exactly these time changes involve – what exactly creates difficulties, impacts on everyone but more profoundly affecting those with already-existing health issues. These kinds of shifts continue being scrutinized by experts.
This time change has come under serious scrutiny by scientists and health workers; highlighting issues surrounding public safety. They think the best strategy for health remains within keeping the clock in standard time since it better aligns with human biology (the human biological clock), according to the american academy of sleep medicine (AASM). This points to several problems: Those changes in the timings and rhythms that control our daily schedule of alertness and sleep patterns. Even subtle changes greatly impact sleep patterns; something made very obvious to those paying attention.
Those seasonal time shifts create mismatches between our internal clock and those rhythms which surround us externally, causing real health problems and even affecting public safety; a far larger, broader impact than people generally realize. While many people feel surprisingly energetic in “fall back” season, many other people find these changes particularly affecting and problematic.
While there isn’t some kind of universal approach to ensure your sleep will not be affected, some strategies work consistently: Mindful techniques; adjusting sleep hygiene and reducing disruptions may actually be incredibly beneficial; improving the timing of your sleep will be beneficial, too.
Also, those individuals with Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) – a kind of depression linked to less sunlight and shorter days, this condition will likely experience those far stronger difficulties relating to maintaining normal sleep cycles! Recent research in the Journal of Affective Disorders has demonstrated light therapy is super effective in those kinds of cases, significantly surpassing antidepressants or other similar therapies. For people, the results and impacts were generally surprisingly excellent, and is very effective against these kinds of disorders.
This changing the clock has deep roots, not what many assume. It isn’t actually intended to benefit farmers and those kinds of popular mythologies. That’s only a coincidence. Those concepts began back in 1916, the first time the Summer Time Act in Britain – it was designed to reduce fuel use and this decision was implemented in the midst of a world war; its history is as weird as some might have imagined. While arguments exist on both sides, with some stating that additional daylight in mornings aids Productivity, this claim remains greatly refuted.
Even with changes done decades after that initial introduction; including various events affecting its status quo across Europe; that changed it significantly throughout the continent – some people maintain that getting rid of those periodic clock shifts is necessary – and despite those changes across different parts of the world – it’s not actually happening. There are continued problems associated with shifting clock times that need attention. No immediate changes for that.
That extra hour from "falling back"? It's a great chance to reset our sleep. The changes around that extra hour need adjustments to improve it however – so some preemptive measures; implementing smarter ways to manage sleep cycles may reduce that impact caused by such change and could reduce health issues associated with a change! Remember, these time shifts greatly impact those who may have additional challenges.