I’ve been working night shift for 5 years and I don’t feel any different than when I worked day shift, you get used to it and I actually sleep better in daylight now.
This is really interesting. Learned a lot. I’m trying to avoid night shifts but the extra pay is tempting me, aside from the fact that the bosses aren’t around to micromanage you.
That's great to hear! We are happy to hear that you're enjoying the podcast. Would you like to suggest any future topics that you would like the team to cover?
Hey a medicine student here, working on a project on shift work. Your podcast had great information, but where can I find the sources corresponing to all these claims?
If you Google night shift meta analysis, the studies should be there by the national institute of health. Also be aware that all the studies are skewed and what I considered flawed because they don't look at night shift (although they say they do) they look at work patterns that create a non constant circadian rhythm. In all the studies in the meta analysis, there is not 1 that looks at people who work consistent night shift and keep their night shift circadian rhythm 24/7. Most studies study rotational shifts (and I agree with their findings) and many assume night shift workers get lack of sleep which active experiments replicate. So it's not accurate to say night shift causes the health issues, it's people constantly changing their circadian rhythm and poor sleep health cause issues.
We are so happy to hear that you enjoyed the ep! Are there any topics that you would like us to cover in the future that we haven't touched on yet, or can revisit for you from a different angle? :)
@@TheATPProject yes, something melatonin related would be great. Current information on it does not sufficiently convey the research we have. This led to me taking a higher than appropriate dosage when I first started out with it. Only later did i realize that even minuscule dosages could spike serum melatonin levels by 20 or 30 times. And that a fraction of the population metabolizes it extremely slowly due to a genetic variation, which leads to them becoming extremely sensitive to extremely small dosages that normal humans would barely even register
@@adarshrajbhatt6557 This is a great suggestion! I know that we have recently recorded some melatonin shippets for Tiktok however some longer form content on our podcast would be awesome! Thanks for the suggestion
So I have tried night shift way back when your med tech in Uni in UK but adjusted in Melbourne, Australia days after 3 yrs. Back to England. Does it matter which time zone I adapt my day scheduled to? And how long does it take to say it’s normalised? I’m now in US California.for 6 years now. It’s taken 3-6 months to feel back to normal here. I feel I’m back to a day schedule again
Im a year into Night Shift and I’m done with it. Start prioritizing my health 🙏
I’m a night shift nurse and I am struggling with the night shift. Dark circles, no energy, and weight gain. Etc more 😢
We hope you gained some useful information from this one :)
I’ve been working night shift for 5 years and I don’t feel any different than when I worked day shift, you get used to it and I actually sleep better in daylight now.
Thank you for this video! Very informative
This is really interesting. Learned a lot. I’m trying to avoid night shifts but the extra pay is tempting me, aside from the fact that the bosses aren’t around to micromanage you.
I took my first night job. It definitely has its perks and downsides
listening to this as I drive to do my night shift hahahahha. very funny podcast, kept me entertained and informed for an hour. good stuff!
That's great to hear! We are happy to hear that you're enjoying the podcast. Would you like to suggest any future topics that you would like the team to cover?
Great information. Deeply concerning but grateful to hear the science on this. Funny dudes too! Thx
Glad you enjoyed it!
Hey a medicine student here, working on a project on shift work. Your podcast had great information, but where can I find the sources corresponing to all these claims?
If you Google night shift meta analysis, the studies should be there by the national institute of health. Also be aware that all the studies are skewed and what I considered flawed because they don't look at night shift (although they say they do) they look at work patterns that create a non constant circadian rhythm. In all the studies in the meta analysis, there is not 1 that looks at people who work consistent night shift and keep their night shift circadian rhythm 24/7. Most studies study rotational shifts (and I agree with their findings) and many assume night shift workers get lack of sleep which active experiments replicate. So it's not accurate to say night shift causes the health issues, it's people constantly changing their circadian rhythm and poor sleep health cause issues.
This was life changing for me, a shift worker. Thanks!
We are so happy to hear that you enjoyed the ep! Are there any topics that you would like us to cover in the future that we haven't touched on yet, or can revisit for you from a different angle? :)
@@TheATPProject yes, something melatonin related would be great. Current information on it does not sufficiently convey the research we have. This led to me taking a higher than appropriate dosage when I first started out with it.
Only later did i realize that even minuscule dosages could spike serum melatonin levels by 20 or 30 times. And that a fraction of the population metabolizes it extremely slowly due to a genetic variation, which leads to them becoming extremely sensitive to extremely small dosages that normal humans would barely even register
@@adarshrajbhatt6557 This is a great suggestion! I know that we have recently recorded some melatonin shippets for Tiktok however some longer form content on our podcast would be awesome! Thanks for the suggestion
Very informative! Thanks!
Glad you found it helpful! :)
So I have tried night shift way back when your med tech in Uni in UK but adjusted in Melbourne, Australia days after 3 yrs. Back to England.
Does it matter which time zone I adapt my day scheduled to? And how long does it take to say it’s normalised?
I’m now in US California.for 6 years now. It’s taken 3-6 months to feel back to normal here. I feel I’m back to a day schedule again
I worked it for 6 months. It was awful. Got sick 3 times.
I’m curious why you can’t say “the C word” on here?
We have had a few videos removed from RUclips because of this. So to make sure we don't get banned or the videos are removed we play it safe
@@TheATPProject So much for freedom of speech! This is nuts.
Good info but too much extraneous talking, jokes, etc. Just the facts please.