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The impact of meal timing on performance, sleepiness, gastric upset, and hunger during simulated night shift_CQU.pdf (1.13 MB)

The impact of meal timing on performance, sleepiness, gastric upset, and hunger during simulated night shift

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posted on 2023-02-27, 04:39 authored by Crystal Leigh GRANT, Jillian DORRIAN, Alison Maree COATES, Maja PAJCIN, David John KENNAWAY, Gary Allen WITTERT, Leonie Kaye HEILBRONN, Chris DELLA VEDOVA, Charlotte GuptaCharlotte Gupta, Siobhan BANKS
This study examined the impact of eating during simulated night shift on performance and subjective complaints. Subjects were randomized to eating at night (n=5; 23.2 ± 5.5 y) or not eating at night (n=5; 26.2 ± 6.4 y). All participants were given one sleep opportunity of 8 h (22:00 h-06:00 h) before transitioning to the night shift protocol. During the four days of simulated night shift participants were awake from 16:00 h-10:00 h with a daytime sleep of 6 h (10:00 h-16:00 h). In the simulated night shift protocol, meals were provided at ≈0700 h, 1900 h and 0130 h (eating at night); or ≈0700 h, 0930 h, 1410 h and 1900 h (not eating at night). Subjects completed sleepiness, hunger and gastric complaint scales, a Digit Symbol Substitution Task and a 10-min Psychomotor Vigilance Task. Increased sleepiness and performance impairment was evident in both conditions at 0400 h (p<0.05). Performance impairment at 0400 h was exacerbated when eating at night. Not eating at night was associated with elevated hunger and a small but significant elevation in stomach upset across the night (p<0.026). Eating at night was associated with elevated bloating on night one, which decreased across the protocol. Restricting food intake may limit performance impairments at night. Dietary recommendations to improve night-shift performance must also consider worker comfort.

History

Volume

55

Issue

5

Start Page

423

End Page

436

Number of Pages

14

eISSN

1880-8026

ISSN

0019-8366

Publisher

National Institute of Industrial Health

Publisher License

CC BY-NC-ND

Additional Rights

CC BY NC ND

Language

en

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • Yes

Acceptance Date

2017-07-18

External Author Affiliations

University of South Australia; University of Adelaide

Author Research Institute

  • Appleton Institute

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Medium

Print-Electronic

Journal

Industrial Health