
Millions of shift workers begin their days already fatigued, and many live with diagnosable sleep disorders that remain unrecognized and untreated for years. Shift Work Sleep Disorder can cause persistent insomnia, chronic fatigue, and impaired concentration. Untreated symptoms can compound into higher risks of depression, Type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. Workplace outcomes also worsen, with higher absenteeism, more on-the-job errors, and greater injury risk, especially in logistics, healthcare, and transportation. Diagnosis is difficult because standard care relies on overnight polysomnography at sleep clinics, requiring schedules incompatible with night shifts. Limited specialist availability creates months-long waits, creating an accessibility gap for hourly workers.
"Shift Work Sleep Disorder (SWSD) affects up to 40% of U.S. shift workers. It can cause persistent insomnia, chronic fatigue, and impaired concentration. If left untreated, the effects compound, including increased risk of depression, Type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. Workplace consequences track a similar arc. Fatigued workers have higher rates of absenteeism, more on-the-job errors, and greater injury risk. For industries like logistics, healthcare, and transportation where precision and reliability are non-negotiable, this is a meaningful operational problem with a real dollar figure attached."
"Getting diagnosed with a sleep disorder requires navigating a system that was never built for hourly workers. The standard diagnostic pathway is an overnight polysomnography (PSG) study at a sleep clinic. These studies require a patient to arrive at a facility during hours that are fundamentally incompatible with a night shift schedule. With one trained sleep specialist for every 43,000 Americans, the wait time for a referral and initial appointment can take months. At every step, the employee without scheduling flexibility faces an accessibility issue that salaried counterparts do not."
"These workers aren't just fatigued from long hours. Many are living with a real, diagnosable medical condition that goes unrecognized and untreated, sometimes for years. And the cost of that gap doesn't stay invisible forever. Shift Work Sleep Disorder (SWSD) affects up to 40% of U.S. shift workers. It can cause persistent insomnia, chronic fatigue, and impaired concentration."
#shift-work-sleep-disorder #sleep-disorders #workplace-health #healthcare-access #occupational-safety
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