Heart attack rates change with shift of daylight saving time
Heart attack rates change with shift of daylight saving time
The risk of heart attacks changes when clocks spring ahead or fall back at the start or end of daylight saving time, according to a study published Thursday in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Setting the clock ahead in spring for the start of daylight saving time appears to increase the heart attack rates, possibly because of sleep deprivation, said the study based on heart attacks in Sweden.