Sleep habits, alertness, cortisol levels, and cardiac autonomic activity in short-distance bus drivers differences between morning and afternoon shifts.

Author(s)
Diez, J.J. Vigo, D.E. Pérez Lloret, S. Rigters, S. Role, N. Cardinali, D.P. & Pérez Chada, D.
Year
Abstract

The objective of this study was to evaluate sleep, alertness, salivary cortisol levels, and autonomic activity in the afternoon and morning shifts of a sample of short-distance bus drivers. A sample of 47 bus drivers was evaluated. Data regarding subjects and working characteristics, alertness (psychomotor vigilance task), sleep habits (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, Epworth Sleepiness Scale, Actigraphy), endocrine stress response (salivary cortisol), and autonomic activity (heart-rate variability) were collected. Sleep restriction was highly prevalent. Drivers in the morning shift slept 1 hour less than those in the afternoon shift, showed lower reaction time performance, a flattening of cortisol morning-evening difference, and higher overweight prevalence. The differences found between morning and afternoon shifts point out to the need of the implementation of educational strategies to compensate the sleep loss associated with an early work schedule. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20150976 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Journal of Occupational & Environmental Medicine, Vol. 53 (2011), No. 7 (July), p. 806-811, 45 ref.

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.