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Sleep experts say Senate has it wrong: Standard time, not daylight saving, should be permanent

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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Sleep experts widely agree with the Senate that the country should abandon its twice-yearly seasonal time changes. But they disagree on one key point: which time system should be permanent. Unlike the Senate, many sleep experts believe the country should adopt year-round standard time.

After the Senate voted unanimously and with little discussion Tuesday to make daylight saving time permanent, the American Academy of Sleep Medicine issued a statement cautioning that the move overlooks potential health risks associated with that time system. (The legislation, which would take effect next year, must get through the House and be signed by President Biden to become law.)
“We do applaud stopping the switching during the course of the year and settling on a permanent time,” said Jocelyn Cheng, a member of the AASM’s public safety committee. But, she added, “standard time, for so many scientific and circadian rationales and public health safety reasons, should really be what the permanent time is set to.”


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The AASM made this stance clear in 2020 when it released a position statement recommending that the country institute year-round standard time. Its reasoning, in part, is that standard time is more closely associated with humans’ intrinsic circadian rhythm, and that disrupting that rhythm, as happens with daylight saving time, has been associated with increased risks of obesity, metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular disease and depression.








Should you hate daylight saving time? That depends on where you live.








Daylight saving time was created to make better use of sunlight during the summer. But as days get shorter in winter, many people experience depression. (Daron Taylor/The Washington Post)
Although some experts have called for more research before deciding on a permanent time while others questioned the push for year-round standard time, the AASM statement received backing from more than a dozen other organizations, including the National Safety Council and the National Parent Teacher Association.

Tuesday’s vote comes amid a growing nationwide push for permanent daylight saving time. Though critics have cast doubt on the purported energy-saving benefits, advocates argue that it promotes public safety, with evidence linking the extra daylight in the evenings to a decrease in crime.



Senate passes bill to make daylight saving time permanent







The U.S. Senate on March 15 passed a bill to make daylight saving time permanent all year. (The Washington Post)
“The Senate has finally delivered on something Americans all over the country want: to never have to change their clocks again,” said Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), who spoke on the Senate floor after the vote. Murray co-authored the bipartisan bill with Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and others.



“No more dark afternoons in the winter,” Murray said. “No more losing an hour of sleep every spring. We want more sunshine during our most productive waking hours.”
But many sleep experts say that those in favor of more light in the late afternoons and evenings may not be considering the costs.
“We have all enjoyed those summer evenings with seemingly endless dusks,” said David Neubauer, an associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Johns Hopkins University. But daylight saving time “does not ‘save’ evening light at all, it simply steals it from the morning when it is necessary to maintain our healthy biological rhythms.”
Although the AASM noted that chronic effects of permanent daylight saving time have not been well studied, it highlighted some research that found “the body clock does not adjust to DST even after several months,” which could result in a permanent discrepancy between the environmental clock and the body clock.




“The circadian clock, it’s not just something that involves the cells of your brain,” Cheng said. “The circadian clock also regulates rhythms in other areas of the body — like cells of the heart, like cells of the liver — and by altering our natural circadian rhythm in this way, we’re throwing off that biological rhythm, and that’s a longer term effect.”
While no time system will be perfect for everyone, making daylight saving time permanent would lead to a greater number of dark mornings than we have now, said Phyllis Zee, chief of sleep medicine at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine.
“With daylight saving time, we are perpetually out of synchronization with our internal clocks and we often achieve less nighttime sleep, both circumstances having negative health impacts,” Neubauer said. “Extra evening light suppresses the melatonin that should be preparing us for falling asleep. The later dawn during daylight saving time deprives our biological clocks of the critical light signal.”






Experts say circadian misalignment has been associated with adverse effects on cognition and mood as well as cardiovascular and metabolic function. “It’s really not a good thing to have your internal body clocks out of sync,” Zee said. “Imagine being in jet lag a lot of the time; it can’t be good for you.”
The current enthusiasm for permanent daylight saving time is “grossly misguided,” said Neubauer, who predicted a return to “the extremely unpopular 1970s dark winter mornings with commuters going to work and children going to school long before sunrise, inevitably leading to injuries and fatalities.”
Zee said her “heart sank” when she saw the news of the Senate vote. “I thought there would be more of a discussion, that it wouldn’t be as unanimous.” Of the three potential time systems for the country to be on — permanent standard, biannual switching and permanent daylight saving time — she said, the last is “probably the worst choice.”



The AASM noted in its statement Tuesday that the pros and cons of daylight saving time and standard time were discussed in detail during a hearing held by a House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on March 9. “Unfortunately, [Tuesday’s] quick action by the Senate allowed for neither a robust discussion nor a debate,” the statement said. “We call on the House to take more time to assess the potential ramifications of establishing permanent daylight saving time before making such an important decision that will affect all Americans.”
“Everybody advocates a permanent time, but this difference between one hour back or one hour forward is not so clear in everybody’s mind,” Cheng said. “I would like to see further debate and some due diligence done on these health consequences and public safety measures before anything else goes forward.”

 
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The only time Americans really care about the daylight saving time change is when we’re anticipating having to change our clocks.
That’s not just my opinion; I can prove it. Each fall and late each winter, searches for “daylight saving time” spike as people start to wonder when they need to either spring forward or fall back.
You’ll notice that there’s been a big spike in interest this particular late winter. That’s in part because the Google search data for this week aren’t yet complete, but it’s mostly because the Senate just unanimously passed legislation that would make the daylight saving time change permanent. In other words, if this bill is signed into law, you won’t have to fall back next November, or ever again.
Well, until the law is almost inevitably rescinded.
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We tend to think about daylight saving time as giving us more sunlight in the evening hours, which we think because it does. But we don’t think about the converse of that very much: that when there’s no daylight saving time, we have more sunlight in the morning. On Sunday, daylight saving went into effect, meaning that last week and for a few months before that we were operating in standard time. When you would get up for work or school in early January right after the Sun had come up — that was standard time.
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And without standard time, you would have been waking up in darkness.
We can visualize this. Enter your Zip code (or any other Zip code) below to see the general sunrise and sunset times for that part of the country in 2022. Then click the checkbox to turn on permanent daylight saving time. Notice what happens to those winter mornings.
Enter a Zip code:
Permanent daylight saving time?

Notice that, wherever you are, it’s likely that some part of December and January would see darkness until past 8 a.m. Sure, you’d have it light later — but not much. Maybe a bit into your evening commute, if you have an evening commute that starts around 5 p.m. (We’re making lots of assumptions here about your lifestyle; feel free to adjust your expectations accordingly.)
Washingtonian wrote about the time the country experimented with permanent daylight saving time in the 1970s. As it turns out, consistently sending kids to school in the dark led to a number of accidents and injuries. When the period in which the change was made permanent ended, it wasn’t renewed.
What’s more, the change itself has gotten far easier since the 1970s. Nowadays, many of the clocks you refer to most often — on your computer or phone or even a smartwatch — make the time adjustment automatically. There’s still a 48-hour period in which things are a little wonky, particularly if you have little kids. But you’re reading this no less than three days since the most recent change: do you still find that it’s disrupting your life?
Congress will do what it does and one should certainly not assume that its decisions will uniformly be to the public’s benefit. But if our brief, seasonal interest in the vagaries of daylight maintenance actually carries into a permanent change to how we manage time, expect that the response to the change this winter might be somewhat less enthusiastic.
Keep an eye on Google searches for “end daylight saving time.” Or “kid’s flashlight.” Or “recall campaign against Congress.”

 
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I don't care which. Pick one. If schools want to adopt a different schedule in winter months, knock yourselves out. Quit effing with my schedule over it. I can get my shit done with 0 or 24 hours of daylight or anything in between. Quit fukin with me for the sake of heliophiles
 
I would agree, but since I'm willing to compromise, maybe we should move it 1/2 hour forward. All I know is everytime the time changes it screws with my sleep patterns and by the time I get back to getting normal sleep, it changes again.
 
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