- Experts have called for the end of time changes throughout the year, due to supposed risks to mental health
- Two states won’t turn the clocks back on November 5 while a further 29 are considering stopping it
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Getting an extra hour in bed when daylight saving time (DST) ends this weekend might seem like a win, but there can be negative effects on our health.
The clocks will ‘fall back’ an hour on November 5 at 2am, and clocks will not come forward again until March 10.
This means it’ll get darker earlier – and we’ll lose an hour of natural light from our evenings. But experts say this may result in increased depression, bipolar and anxiety.
Physician and author Dr Jacob Teitelbaum said: ‘Driving to work and school when it is still dark outside – because of the fall shift – is associated with increased accidents and poor functioning. Also, with increased usage of psychoactive substances among men aged 20 and older.’
Other experts and campaigners are calling for an end to daylight saving – and say we should have the same time all year round.
According to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine, changes in time zones is linked to to an ‘increased risk of heart attacks, mood disturbances, stroke and increased production of inflammatory markers – the markers are one of the body’s responses to stress’.
This is because messing with the time distrupts the body’s internal clock – or circadian rhythm – which regulates essential processes in the body, such as the release of hormones, and the functioning of organs like the heart.
As concern about the health harms grow, increasing states are fighting for a fixed time.
Two states – Arizona and Hawaii – already have one time zone, which remains as it is throughout the year.
This is because the states are close to the equator, meaning they get adequate daylight and heat all year round and there is less change between the seasons.
But 29 states could be headed in the same direction soon, as they are considering legislation to secure a time that remains the same all-year round.
The states – which include Kentucky, Delaware and others (see below) – want to switch to permanent daylight saving time (meaning their clocks would not fall back an hour).
Congress was supposed to do away with DST, the practice of advancing clocks during the warmer months so that darkness will fall at a later clock time, but it never made its way to a full vote.