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11/01/2025

Topic Reading-Vol.4939-11/1/2025

Dear MEL Topic Readers,
How daylight saving time affects our health
Often known as summer time, daylight saving time (DST) is the practice of advancing clocks during the summer months. DST is observed in most of Europe, Canada, the USA, and Egypt in the Northern Hemisphere, and Chile, New Zealand, and some parts of Australia in the Southern Hemisphere. Last Sunday, most European countries ended their daylight saving time, and Canada and the USA will end theirs on this coming Sunday, November 2. DST started in some countries over a century ago during World War I to conserve energy by allowing people to extend their use of natural light. However, this artificial time change seems to disrupt the body’s circadian rhythm, which can lead to sleep deprivation, decreased sleep quality, and negative effects on mood, metabolism, and cardiovascular health, especially during the spring forward transition, causing immediate sleep loss and increasing the risk of health problems like heart attacks, strokes, and accidents. It is quite surprising to find such profound effects of starting a day just an hour earlier or later on our physical and mental health. If an hour is too much, can’t we adjust the time a little by little each day by using our smartphones instead of manually changing clocks for an hour a day, like people did a century ago?
Read the article and learn the impacts of daylight saving time.

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