On Sunday, we “spring ahead” to daylight saving time, even though many sleep experts wish we wouldn’t.
Members of health groups prefer standard time over daylight saving time because they say it’s more aligned with our body clocks.
Lawmakers have pushed to make daylight saving time permanent.
“Research shows that the abrupt seasonal shift in time disrupts circadian rhythms, leading to sleep disturbances, increased fatigue and even a heightened risk of heart attacks and strokes,” says James Rowley, president of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine.
He adds that right after the clocks shift in March, there’s “a spike in workplace accidents, road accidents and medical errors due to sleep deprivation and cognitive impairment.”
Daylight saving time begins at 2 a.m. Sunday, when clocks are set forward one hour.
That means sunrise and sunset on Sunday will appear to happen an hour later than they did the day before.
Mexico, a country in the Ring of Fire that causes 90% of the most powerful earthquakes
Arley Pérez’s home attacked in Culiacán: the singer rules out Sinaloa Cartel factions being behind it
Beatriz Gutiérrez Müller Nominated to Seek Rectorship at BUAP
IMMIGRATION
ICE Expansion During Hispanic Heritage Month Sparks Backlash
BUSINESS
Preparing for the Holiday Sales Rush: Logistics and E-commerce Strategy for Small Businesses
Why Salma Hayek’s husband is selling Puma? What Small Business Owners can Learn
Del Monte Foods Files Bankruptcy: When Is It the Right Time for a Business to Declare Bankruptcy?
Want to Be Your Own Boss? Don’t Fall Into the “Do-It-All” Trap