Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland
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Differences in sleep offset timing between weekdays and weekends in 79,161 adult participants in the UK Biobank

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posted on 2023-01-30, 12:09 authored by Rachael M Kelly, John McDermottJohn McDermott, Andrew N. Coogan

Variability in the timing of daily sleep is increasingly recognized as an important factor in sleep and general physical health. One potential driver of such daily variations in sleep timing is different work and social obligations during the "working week" and weekends. To investigate the nature of weekday/weekend differences in the timing of sleep offset, we examined actigraphy records of 79,161 adult participants in the UK Biobank who wore an actiwatch for 1 week. The time of sleep offset was found to be on average 36 min later on weekends than on weekdays, and when this difference was expressed as an absolute value (i.e., irrespective of sleep offset being either later or earlier on weekends), it was 63 min. Younger age, more socioeconomic disadvantage, currently being in employment, being a smoker, being male, being of non-white ethnicity and later chronotype were associated with greater differences in sleep offset between weekdays and weekend days. Greater differences in sleep offset timing were associated with age-independent small differences in cardiometabolic health indicators of BMI and diastolic blood pressure, but not HbA1c or systolic blood pressure. In a subset of participants with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus, weekday/weekend sleep offset differences were associated weakly with BMI, systolic blood pressure and physical activity. Overall, this study demonstrates potentially substantive differences in sleep offset timings between weekdays and weekends in a large sample of UK adults, and that such differences may have public health implications. 

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The original article is available at https://www.mdpi.com/

Published Citation

Kelly RM, McDermott JH, Coogan AN. Differences in sleep offset timing between weekdays and weekends in 79,161 adult participants in the UK Biobank. Clocks Sleep. 2022;4(4):658-674.

Publication Date

22 November 2022

PubMed ID

36547101

Department/Unit

  • Medicine

Publisher

MDPI

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)