Night Owls Face Higher Diabetes Risk Due to Late Nights

TL;DR Summary
A study from Brigham and Women's Hospital reveals that individuals who identify as night owls and have later sleep and wake times are at a higher risk of developing diabetes. The research, conducted on 63,676 female nurses, found that evening chronotype was associated with a 19% increased risk of diabetes after accounting for lifestyle factors. Those with evening chronotypes were more likely to engage in unhealthy behaviors such as excessive alcohol consumption, poor diet quality, smoking, and inadequate sleep. The study suggests that personalized work scheduling and tailored prevention strategies may be beneficial in reducing diabetes risk for night owls.
- Night Owls Beware: Staying Up Late Tied to Increased Diabetes Risk SciTechDaily
- Bad habits of night owls may lead to type 2 diabetes, study says CNN
- 'Night Owls' Are Often Less Healthy, Upping Diabetes Risk U.S. News & World Report
- Are night owls at higher risk for diabetes? News-Medical.Net
- Night owls face much higher risk of developing diabetes than early birds Study Finds
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