PARIS: A survey of more than 430,000 people in Britain found that the night owls had a 10-percent higher risk of dying in the 6.5-year study period than “larks” who rise and set with the sun, according to researchers.
“This is a public health issue that can no longer be ignored,” said study co-author Malcolm van Schantz of the University of Surrey arguing that “night types” should be allowed to start and finish work later in the day.
“Night owls trying to live in a morning-lark world may suffer health consequences,” said fellow author Kristen Knutson of the Northwestern University in Chicago. The duo gathered information on nearly half-a-million people aged 38-73 from a public database.
27 percent participants had defined themselves as either “definitely a morning person”, while 35 percent were “more a morning person than an evening person”, 28 percent agreed to be “more an evening than a morning person” while 9 percent were “definitely an evening person”.
Each listed their weight, smoking habits, and socioeconomic status.
Deaths in the group, just over 10,500 in total, were documented for six-and-a-half years and the night owl group, the team found, had a 10-percent higher risk of dying than those in the extreme early-morning group.
People in the late-night group were more likely to suffer from psychological disorders, diabetes, and stomach and breathing troubles, and slept fewer hours per night. They were also more likely to smoke, drink alcohol and coffee, and use illegal drugs.
The higher risk may be because “people who stay up late have an internal biological clock that doesn’t match their external environment,” Knutson said. “It could be psychological stress, eating at the wrong time for the body, not exercising enough, not sleeping enough, being awake at night by yourself, maybe drug or alcohol use.”
The research duo urged special treatment for night owls.
“If you can recognise these (types) are, in part, genetically determined and not just a character flaw, jobs and work hours could have more flexibility for owls,” Knutson said.
“They shouldn’t be forced to get up for an 8 am shift.”