Clockwatching
Impress your mates at the pub with your
startling repertoire of esoteric medical knowledge
What
happens this year on 26 March in Europe, is delayed until 2 April
in America, but doesn't occur in Japan at all? Well, in those
countries taking part, it's time to turn the clocks forward
one hour, marking the start of daylight saving time (DST), or
summer time as it's also known. Now you might groan about
losing valuable minutes for partying, studying, or sleeping (your
priorities changing as you progress through the course), but are
there any tangible benefits to this annual ritual? And what about
the health implications of daylight saving that don't often
get a mention?
Origins
Benjamin Franklin came up with the bright idea
in 1784, to make better use of daylight and so reduce the amount of
money wasted on candles in 18th century Paris.w1 By having the
population rise at dawn and go to bed at sunset, as well as
rationing candle sales and putting a tax on houses with shutters,
he estimated (not entirely seriously) that anywhere between a150m and a400m in today's
money could be saved.
The idea didn't resurface until 1907
when a London builder, William Willett, advocated advancing the
clocks by 20 minutes on each Sunday in April and reversing the
process in September.w2 It found limited support until the
first world war, when Britain, Germany, and other countries adopted
daylight saving in 1916 to boost wartime production and save coal.
The US followed suit for seven months in 1918, but public
opposition led to Congress overriding the measure against the
wishes of President Woodrow Wilson—it wasn't until the
second world war that Franklin Roosevelt introduced it again across
America. At the same time in the UK, political enthusiasm for the
energy savings associated with DST led to the introduction of
double summer time for the duration of the war, whereby the clocks
were advanced two hours ahead of Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) in the
summer and stayed an hour ahead of GMT for the rest of the year.
Fast-forward to today, and roughly 70
countries have daylight saving time, although when it starts, how
long it lasts and how much of each country is affected varies
widely.
Benefits
Accident reduction
A reduction in fatal road traffic accidents is
often cited as the major public health benefit of daylight saving
time. When Great Britain experimented with maintaining DST all year
round between 1968 and 1971, it's thought about 2,500 fewer
people were killed or seriously injured during the first two
winters of the trial—the equivalent of an 11.7% reduction in
casualties for the whole country. Although morning casualties
increased, the number was far outweighed by the drop in casualties
in the longer evenings.w3 Smaller studies in the UK have confirmed
this trend, with improvements in safety primarily for pedestrians,
cyclists, and school children.w4 w5 More recently, the Royal
Society for the Prevention of Accidents has estimated that 450
deaths and serious injuries occur during the five months of the
year when DST is not in operation in the UK.w6 In the US, the
Insurance Institute for Highway Safety estimated that 901 fatal
crashes could have been prevented over the years 1987-91 if DST had
been retained year round due to the availability of an extra hour
of daylight for the busier evening traffic rush.w7
Unfortunately “unambiguous” and
“evidence” rarely go together. The three year British
trial of DST coincided with the introduction of random breath
testing and new speed limits—powerful incentives for drivers
to improve their behaviour regardless of how bright the evening is.
Studies have shown an increase in road accidents during the first
few days of DST (by as much as 8%)w8 and unexpectedly following the
end of DSTw9 which are attributed diversely to loss of an
hour's sleep, alcohol, fatigue, and the fact that the early
morning period is intrinsically risky.
Energy savings
Just as importantly for the planet, using
daylight more efficiently could mean modest but significant energy
savings and reduced pollution. As a result of the Arab oil embargo
in the 1970s, the US Congress experimented with extended DST for
two years (18 months over that period instead of the normal 12).
When the US Department of Transport evaluated
the effectiveness of the trial, it found that roughly 100000
barrels of oil were saved daily in March and April of 1974 and 1975
by having DST.w10 Extending this finding, energy stricken
California estimates that an extension of DST for the winter months
could reduce electricity use by 0.5%.w11 These savings are
mainly due to reduced domestic consumption thanks to the extra hour
of daylight in the evenings.
However, before we rush to adjust our clocks,
a senior official in the US Department of Transport recently
sounded a note of caution: “There have been dramatic changes
in lifestyle and commerce since we completed our studies that raise
serious questions about extrapolating conclusions from our studies
into today's world.”w10
She emphasised that their work is over 25
years old, was limited in scope, and has had its methods questioned
(for example, failing to consider that reduced electricity use
could be offset by increased petrol consumption owing to extra
evening travel)w12—so we haven't found an alternative
to Kyoto just yet.
General wellbeing
Claims have been made that brighter evenings
would increase our exposure to daylight and encourage outdoor
activity, fitness and health. Supporters of extended DST also
maintain that more time spent in the sunlight would reduce vitamin
D deficiencies, especially in children and elderly people, and help
people with depressionw13 and seasonal affective disorder
(SAD)—a specific type of depression believed to be related to
reduced exposure to sunlight.w14 As low vitamin D levels are a
problem for 6-18% of the elderly US population,w15 rocketing to 57%
of the general inpatient population,w16 and with anywhere up to 500000 suffering from SAD
in the UK alone,w17 the public health benefits of DST could be
far-reaching but have not been proved.
Exceptions to benefits
Nevertheless, although we might agree that all
these benefits are worth while, our bodies beg to differ when
actually faced with the change. Circadian rhythms, our own
biological clocks, regulate behavioural and physiological processes
and are synchronised by the daily light-dark cycle. Changing over
to DST in the spring is thought to upset this cycle in healthy
adults who get less than eight hours sleep (most medics) or are
more active in the evenings,w18 and disruption is also seen for
five days after DST ends.w19 Those few transition days are
particularly difficult for anyone with depression20 as well as
teenagers and adolescents, whose body clocks are already poorly
synchronised to daylight thanks to delayed secretion of melatonin,
the body's “sleepiness” hormone.w21 All in
all, the only ones enjoying changeover day itself will probably be
those irritating individuals who have never missed a night's
sleep and finish a day's work before the rest of us are even
out of bed, but, to quote Oscar Wilde, “Only dull people are
brilliant at breakfast.”
Conclusion
Despite mixed reports, governments look set to
continue tinkering with the issue. George Bush, mindful of his
country's addiction to oil, has extended DST in the US by a
month, starting in 2007. In the UK, frustrated by a decade of
government dithering, the Royal Society for the Prevention of
Accidents has called for DST to be in place throughout the winter,
with double summer time from March to October (two hours ahead of
GMT); a throwback to the war years, this would have the effect of
abolishing GMT, putting the UK in the same time zone as western
Europe.w14 While some will be quick to criticise any possibility of
change, a chance that hundreds of road traffic accidents could be
prevented means that the plans deserve a fair hearing at the very
least; whether they will be implemented is a different matter.
I thank Kevin Clinton, road safety adviser,
Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents, for his help.
Further information
California Energy
Commission — www.energy.ca.gov/daylightsaving.html
Institute for Dynamic Educational
Advancement — www.webexhibits.org/daylightsaving
Royal Society for the Prevention of
Accidents — www.rospa.org
Thomas Mac Mahon , intercalating medical student, University College
Dublin, Ireland
Email: tmacmahon@gmail.com
studentBMJ 2006;14:133 - 176 April ISSN 0966-6494
- Franklin, B., "An Economical Project: Daylight Saving." A letter to the editor of the Journal de Paris April 26, 1784 http://webexhibits.org/daylightsaving/franklin3.html (accessed February 10, 2006)
- Franklin, B., "An Economical Project: Daylight Saving." A letter to the editor of the Journal de Paris April 26, 1784 http://webexhibits.org/daylightsaving/franklin3.html (accessed February 10, 2006)
- Home Office, "Review of British Standard Time," Cmnd 4512: HMSO, 1970
- Whittaker, J.D., "An investigation into the effects of British Summer Time on road traffic accident casualties in Cheshire," J Accid Emerg Med 13 (1996): 189-92
- Adams, J., White, M., Heywood, P., "Year-round daylight saving and serious or fatal road traffic injuries in children in the north-east of England," J Public Health (Oxf) 27 (2005): 316-7
- Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents. Lighter Evenings: RoSPA summertime briefing. Birmingham, 2005 http://www.rospa.com/roadsafety/info/summertime_briefing.pdf (accessed February 10, 2006)
- Ferguson, S.A., et al., "Daylight saving time and motor vehicle crashes: the reduction in pedestrian and vehicle occupant fatalities," Am J Public Health 85 (1995): 92-5
- Coren, S., "Accidental death and the shift to daylight savings time," Percept Motor Skills 83 (1996): 921-2
- Varughese, J., Allen, R.P., "Fatal accidents following changes in daylight savings time: the American experience," Sleep Med 2 (2001): 31-6
- U.S. Department of Transportation. The Daylight Saving Time study. A report to Congress. Washington, GPO, 1975. Cited by: L.L. Lawson, Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary for Transportation Policy, appearing before the House Science Committee, Energy Subcommittee, concerning daylight saving time and energy conservation, May 24, 2001 http://www.house.gov/science/energy/may24/lawson.htm (accessed February 10, 2006)
- Kandel, A., Metz, D., "Effects of Daylight Saving Time on California Electricity Use," California Energy Commission, May 2001 http://www.energy.ca.gov/reports/2001-05-23_400-01-013.PDF (accessed February 10, 2006)
- Tellier-Beauregard, F., "PRB 05-18E Daylight saving time and energy conservation," Parliamentary Research and Information Service, Parliament of Canada. July 29, 2005 http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/library/PRBpubs/prb0518-e.htm#2txt (accessed February 10, 2006)
- Olders, H., "Average sunrise time predicts depression prevalence," J Psychosom Res 55 (2003): 99-105
- Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents. Single/Double Summer Time: Position Paper. Birmingham, 2003 (updated 2005). http://www.rospa.com/roadsafety/info/summertime_paper.pdf (accessed February 10, 2006)
- http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2004/9241546123_chap3.pdf (accessed February 10, 2006)
- Thomas, M.K., et al., "Hypovitaminosis D in medical inpatients," N Engl J Med 338 (1998): 777-83
- Seasonal Affective Disorder Association http://www.sada.org.uk/ (accessed February 10, 2006)
- Lahti, T.A., et al., "Transition into daylight saving time influences the fragmentation of the rest-activity cycle," J Circadian Rhythms 19 (2006): 1 [Epub ahead of print]
- Monk, T.H., Folkard, S., "Adjusting to the changes to and from Daylight Saving Time," Nature 261 (1976): 688-9
- Bunney, W.E., Bunney, B.G., "Molecular clock genes in man and lower animals: possible implications for circadian abnormalities in depression," Neuropsychopharmacology 22 (2000): 335-45
- Carskadon, M.A., et al., "Regulation of adolescent sleep: implications for behaviour," Ann N Y Acad Sci 1021 (2004): 276-91
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Responses published this month
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Articles
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Responses
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EDUCATION
Clockwatching
Thomas Mac Mahon (April 2006)
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Ajay Dhakal (April 15th, 2006)
Read this response
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EDUCATION
Clockwatching
Thomas Mac Mahon (April 2006)
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Ajay Dhakal (April 15th, 2006)
MBBS 3rd year, Kathmandu Medical College
ajaydhakal@hotmail.com
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It seems that Day light Saving Time (DST) is paying off well with accident reduction, energy savings and general well being even some people doubt on this. Most of us have experienced that the morning mood is more refreshing than the evening one and work is done more efficiently in the morning than in the afternoon or evening.
In a developing country like Nepal, which is still striving for poverty alleviation, education, primary health care and employment, the issues like energy savings and prevention of road traffic accidents are not at the top of the priority list. Thus anything like DST has never been in effect. However for the three winter months the government office hour starts from 9a.m. instead of 10a.m. which is the normal starting time. There have been no significant studies done to show that this rule has done any good in the energy savings, accident prevention and the efficiency of the work delivery.
If DST is really efficient in minimizing the expenses of the country by energy savings and maintaining good health of its people then it becomes more relevant for the countries with poor economic performance. So why not start DST even by the developing and under developed nations and see how it works?
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