Abstract

Summary

This placebo-controlled field study tested whether blue light-blocking glasses could mitigate circadian disruption and improve sleep quality and alertness in nurses working night shifts. The findings have practical implications for healthcare lighting design and personal protective strategies for shift workers exposed to artificial light during nighttime hours.
Abstract

Key Findings

  • Abstract is truncated — specific quantitative outcomes (effect sizes, p-values, sleep metrics) are not available from the provided text.
  • Study design was placebo-controlled and exploratory, suggesting preliminary evidence rather than definitive conclusions about blue-light blocking glasses as an intervention for night shift workers.
Categories

Categories

Shift Work & Staff Wellbeing: Examines blue-light blocking glasses as an intervention for night shift nurses to address circadian misalignment and sleep problems.
Sleep & Circadian Health: Investigates the impact of blue light filtering on circadian rhythm alignment, sleep quality, and alertness in shift workers.
Workplace Performance: Measures alertness outcomes in nurses during night shifts as a function of blue light exposure modification.
Authors

Author(s)

SL Hartmeyer
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