Vitenskapelig artikkel

Publisert

  • 2026

Objectives: This study aimed to investigate how alertness, sleepiness, and fatigue change across consecutive night compared to morning shifts among Arctic shift workers and whether these effects differ between seasons of midnight sun and polar night.

Methods: We conducted an observational crossover study of 118 shift workers from an industrial plant at a high latitude (71°N) in northern Norway. Eighty-one individuals participated in both the light (near 24-hour daylight) and dark (minimal natural light) seasons. Work schedules included blocks of seven consecutive morning shifts and seven consecutive night shifts, separated by four rest days. Alertness (psychomotor vigilance test), subjective sleepiness (Karolinska Sleepiness Scale), and subjective fatigue were measured at the end of shifts on days 1, 3, and 6 of each shift block. We analyzed data using multilevel mixed-effects regression models with season, shift type (morning/night), and consecutive workday number as fixed effects.

Results: Night shifts were linked to lower alertness and higher sleepiness and fatigue in both seasons, with the largest impairments on the first night. Across six consecutive night shifts, alertness improved and sleepiness and fatigue decreased, with similar trajectories in both seasons. There was no evidence that season significantly affected alertness, sleepiness, or fatigue.

Conclusions: Night shifts generally impair alertness [...]

Andreas Næss Holme; Line Victoria Moen; Mikael Sallinen; Kristian Bernhard Nilsen; Charlotte Boccara; Andrew JK Phillips; Fred Haugen; Dagfinn Matre
Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment and Health.
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