Medical malpractice incidents are more severe during the months of the year when daylight saving time is observed in the United States, according to a new study that examined three decades of malpractice claims.
Results show that both medical malpractice incident severity and payment decisions were higher during the months of daylight saving time compared with the months of standard time, after controlling for whether states observe daylight saving time. Payment decisions also were higher, but medical incidents were not more severe, during the one week following the spring transition to daylight saving time.
“The spring daylight saving shift has long been connected to sleepiness, cardiovascular events, and driving accidents, but only recently have we begun to recognize that decision-making processes are also affected at the population level by the spring time shift,” says principal investigator Michael Scullin, PhD, an associate professor of psychology and neuroscience at Baylor University, in a release. “The current results add to this literature by showing that an area that one would hope would be immune—medical errors and malpractice litigation—is susceptible, too.”
The study was published in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine.
According to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine, standard time is optimal because it is closely aligned with the position of the sun in the sky, known as “solar time.” This synchrony is important for the body because sunlight is the most powerful external cue for the human circadian rhythm, the internal “body clock” that regulates the timing of alertness, sleepiness, and other biological functions. By artificially shifting clock time an hour forward, daylight saving time causes a misalignment between clock time and solar time, disrupting the circadian rhythm. This disruption can affect sleep, alertness, mood, and performance.
The researchers analyzed 288,432 malpractice claims between January 1990 and September 2018 from the National Practitioner Data Bank, the most extensive database of malpractice incidents in the United States. To investigate the acute effects of daylight saving time, they compared claims for one week before and after the spring time change. They also assessed chronic effects by comparing claims during the months of daylight saving time with those during the months of standard time. Control states were those that remained on permanent standard time: Arizona, Hawaii, and Indiana (until April 2006).
According to first author Chenlu Gao, PhD, the design of the study did not allow for an assessment of causality, but the results suggest that daylight saving time has an impact on health care outcomes and costs.
“In addition to the acute shift to daylight saving time, it is possible that several months of living under daylight saving time leads to accrued circadian misalignment, which then could affect medical errors and legal evaluations,” says Gao, who has a doctorate in behavioral neuroscience and is a postdoctoral research fellow in the department of anesthesia, critical care, and pain medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, in a release. “Our work joins numerous other studies that document the detrimental effects of spring daylight saving time transitions, and the collective evidence should encourage stakeholders and policymakers to reevaluate daylight saving time for the well-being of the general public.”
The research was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, Alzheimer’s Association, American Academy of Sleep Medicine Foundation, BrightFocus Foundation, and National Institute on Aging.
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