Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Tech & Science

Health research: Daylight saving time messes with our biological clocks

Daily synchrony between day and night cycles and circadian rhythms is essential for the optimization of metabolism for the life processes.

Sunset on a summer's day. — Image by © Tim Sandle.
Sunset on a summer's day. — Image by © Tim Sandle.

As clocks spring forward for daylight saving time in the U.S., a Virginia Tech expert warns that the time change can have serious health consequences. The research shows that daylight saving time messes with our biological clocks by reducing morning sunlight exposure, which pushes our sleep schedules later and can have negative effects on health.

This is according to  Carla Finkielstein, a professor at Virginia Tech’s Fralin Biomedical Research Institute and expert in circadian biology. Circadian rhythm is important in determining sleep and feeding. Daily bio-cycles can alter body temperature, neuronal activity, hormone synthesis, cell regeneration, and other biological activities.

Finkliestein observes: “Staying on standard time year-round is much better for our circadian rhythms, overall health, and well-being.”

Finkielstein’s position is that standard time better aligns with human circadian rhythms. Her lab studies the molecular clocks that tell cells when it’s time to grow, divide, and die. Her research shows that our bodies’ cells have a predictable 24-hour cycle of division regulated by a mix of genetic and environmental cues, such as exposure to light, temperature, and hormone levels.

This research also offers a critical foundation for chronotherapeutics – the study of time-of-day medicine. It also links effects of drugs on biological timing to get the dynamic activity. This new discipline integrates the cellular and molecular biology of circadian rhythms to inform decision-making about when a therapeutic should be administered to yield the best results.

What is daylight saving?

Daylight saving time (DST), began at 2 a.m. on Sunday, March 9, 2025.This is the practice of moving clocks forward one hour in the spring and back by one hour in the fall to extend evening daylight during warmer months. The U.S. daylight saving begins on the second Sunday in March and ends on the first Sunday in November.

It was first adopted in 1918 to conserve energy, it is observed in all states except Hawaii and most of Arizona.

Adverse health effects

Finkliestein’s inference aligns with the Society for Research in Biological Rhythms (SRBR), a scientific organization that warns daylight saving time can increase risks for heart disease, obesity, depression, and workplace accidents.

The SRBR, founded in 1986, advocates for policies that protect biological health, including eliminating DST in favor of permanent standard time.

In 2020, the American Academy of Sleep Medicine published a position statement, aligned with the European Sleep Research Society, European Biological Rhythms Society, and Society for Research on Biological Rhythms’ position, calling for the abolishment of daylight saving time (DST) in favor of the maintenance of standard time year-round.

While many people feel that ending the twice-yearly clock shift is the right thing to do, few people realize that choosing to keep the clocks permanently on DST over standard time could impact their short-term well-being and long-term health. 

The organizations have been campaigning on this subject over the past five years. They argue that living with your internal clock slightly offset from the solar light-dark cycle is a form of ‘social jet lag,’ and it has significant consequences, including short sleep duration, increased metabolic disorderscardiovascular problems, and mood disorders, and even reduced life expectancy.

Avatar photo
Written By

Dr. Tim Sandle is Digital Journal's Editor-at-Large for science news. Tim specializes in science, technology, environmental, business, and health journalism. He is additionally a practising microbiologist; and an author. He is also interested in history, politics and current affairs.

You may also like:

World

Trump's administration on Sunday began mass layoffs at Voice of America and other US-funded media.

Business

Totally antagonizing and infuriating Canada and the European Union in two sentences.

Tech & Science

The James Webb Space Telescope has directly observed the key chemical of carbon dioxide in planets outside of our solar system.

World

The EU warned that Trump's freeze on US-funded media outlets, including Radio Free Europe, risked "benefitting our common adversaries."