Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Artificial Light At Night Can Make You Feel Sick

Darpan News Desk IANS, 19 Mar, 2015 01:55 PM
    Over-exposure to artificial light at night has serious long-term health implications like tendency to breast cancer, obesity, diabetes, depression, and possibly other forms of cancer, says a new study.
     
    "It's a new analysis and synthesis of what we know up to now on the effect of lighting on our health," said Richard Stevens University of Connecticut, Farmington (Uconn).
     
    "We don't know for certain, but there's growing evidence that the long-term implications of this have ties to breast cancer, obesity, diabetes, depression, and possibly other form of cancers," he said.
     
    Inadequate exposure to natural light during the day and overexposure to artificial light at night is not conducive to the body's natural sleep/wake cycle.
     
    Stevens and co-author Yong Zhu from Yale University explained the known short-term and suspected long-term impacts of circadian disruption in an article published in the British journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.
     
    "It's become clear that typical lighting is affecting our physiology," said Stevens.
     
    "But lighting can be improved. We're learning that better lighting can reduce these physiological effects. By that we mean dimmer and longer wavelengths in the evening, and avoiding the bright blue of e-readers, tablets and smart phones," he added.
     
    Those devices emit enough blue light when used in the evening to suppress the sleep-inducing hormone melatonin and disrupt the body's circadian rhythm, the biological mechanism that enables restful sleep.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Organic foods may help prevent cancer

    Organic foods may help prevent cancer
    Organic foods and crops have a suite of advantages over their conventional counterparts, including more antioxidants, fewer, less frequent pesticide residues, and properties that may help prevent cancer, a study suggests.

    Organic foods may help prevent cancer

    Women think females dressed in red searching for Sex

    Women think females dressed in red searching for Sex
    Do you intend to wear a red shirt to your boss's birthday party tonight? Be aware that his spouse might "guard" him, thinking you are out there to seduce and mate.

    Women think females dressed in red searching for Sex

    New method to erase pain

    New method to erase pain
    It is possible to relieve pain hypersensitivity with a new method that rekindles pain so that it can subsequently be erased, says a study.

    New method to erase pain

    Bigger warning labels on cigarette packs more effective

    Bigger warning labels on cigarette packs more effective
    Small text warning labels remind people about the health risks of smoking, but larger, more graphic warning labels with pictures were better at motivating them to quit, a study has shown.

    Bigger warning labels on cigarette packs more effective

    Sex, flying most sought-after dreams

    Sex, flying most sought-after dreams
    So what dream did you have last night? Do not mumble as lucid dreamers, people who are aware to a certain extent what they are dreaming, go through two most frequent dreaming experiences - sex and trying to fly.

    Sex, flying most sought-after dreams

    Scorching summer may trigger kidney stone attacks

    Scorching summer may trigger kidney stone attacks
    Hot and humid days may bring more kidney stones as higher temperatures contribute to dehydration that leads to a higher concentration of calcium in the body that promote the growth of kidney stones.

    Scorching summer may trigger kidney stone attacks