Sunday, December 7, 2025
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Daylight saving risk to diabetics?

Darpan News Desk IANS, 31 Oct, 2014 08:20 AM
  • Daylight saving risk to diabetics?
The twice annual ritual of setting clocks for daylight saving time can affect diabetics adversely, especially those who use insulin pumps.
 
"Some diabetes patients who use insulin pumps may forget to change the clock that is found in these devices," said Saleh Aldasouqi, associate professor of medicine at Michigan State University in the US.
 
"Forgetting to change the time can result in insulin dosing errors that can be harmful," Aldasouqi added.
 
Daylight saving time or summer time is the practice of advancing clocks by an hour near the start of spring so that evenings have more daylight and mornings have less.
 
At the end of daylight saving time people again reset their clock to have an extra hour of morning sleep during the winter.
 
Dosing errors could cause too little or too much insulin being delivered at the right time for these patients, Aldasouqi noted.
 
Too much insulin produces hypoglycemia, which could be severe and trigger seizures, fainting spells or coma.
 
Hyperglycemia is a result of too little insulin being delivered and in the short term is not as harmful as hypoglycemia.
 
Aldasouqi said he has had a number of patients come into his office who have forgotten to make the time change.
 
"The implications of remembering to change the clock in these devices means so much more than just remembering to adjust the alarm clock for that extra hour of sleep," he stressed.
 
The study appeared in the Journal of Diabetes Science and Technology.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

New mother and sleepy? Avoid work for now

New mother and sleepy? Avoid work for now
Are you a new mother and cannot figure out why you are still sleepy and tired at work even four months after birth? Get your maternal leave extended to catch some sleep....

New mother and sleepy? Avoid work for now

Sleep deprivation can take your job

Sleep deprivation can take your job
If you are not sleeping well and enough, apart from health problems, you also run the risk of making bad financial decisions and even losing your job....

Sleep deprivation can take your job

Chronic pain may make you lethargic

Chronic pain may make you lethargic
If you are suffering from chronic pain, it may affect the brain in such a way that it decreases your motivation level even after popping painkillers, says a study....

Chronic pain may make you lethargic

Pouring emotion helps breast cancer survivors

Pouring emotion helps breast cancer survivors
Writing down fears, emotions and benefits of a cancer diagnosis may improve health outcomes for Asian-American breast cancer survivors, a research reveals....

Pouring emotion helps breast cancer survivors

Some jobs increase risk of heart disease

Some jobs increase risk of heart disease
Want to know if your job can give you a heart attack? Workers in service and blue-collar occupations as well as unemployed people are...

Some jobs increase risk of heart disease

Why some people can cope with short sleep

Why some people can cope with short sleep
Most people require seven to nine hours of sleep to have proper daytime functioning, but some people can function normally on less than six hours of sleep...

Why some people can cope with short sleep