The HSE has issued new guidance for shift workers to help them stay healthy. Shift work is an employment practice designed to make use of, or provide service across, all 24 hours of the clock, each day of the week. The day is typically divided into shifts, during which different groups of workers perform their duties. Poorly designed shift working and long working hours that don’t balance work demands with time for rest and recovery can result in fatigue, accidents, injuries and ill health. People vary in how they cope with shift work, depending on their health, fitness, age, lifestyle, and domestic responsibilities. Whilst we cannot change our inbuilt characteristics, the HSE says, it is possible to alter our behaviour or make lifestyle changes that may make shift work more tolerable. Its hints and tips draw on commonly available advice and best practice from a range of sources and may improve sleep quality, increase alertness and reduce health risks for shift workers.

Driving to and from work
Driving to and from work can be risky, particularly after a long shift, a night shift or before an early start. The following strategies may make driving safer:

Identify a suitable sleep schedule
Most adults need seven to eight hours’ sleep a day, although this may decrease with age. Recording sleep patterns and problems using a diary may help to explain fatigue and tiredness. It can also be used to help find the most suitable strategies and conditions for a better quality of sleep.

Make the environment favourable for sleeping
Sleep loss and fatigue are some of the most significant problems for shift workers. It is important to try and maintain your normal level of sleep and rest. Daytime sleep is usually lighter, shorter and of poorer quality than nighttime sleep. It is more frequently disturbed because of warmer temperatures and daytime noise. To help make the environment favourable for sleeping:

Techniques to promote sleep
To promote sleeping, try to follow a similar routine to the one you follow before a normal night’s sleep. The following tips may help you relax after a shift and promote sleep:

Diet
It is very important to consider the timing and quality of your meals. Digestive problems are common in shift workers due to disruption of the body clock and poor diet. Plan your meals to help you stay alert at work and to relax/sleep when you need to rest.

Stimulants and sedatives
Shift workers often turn to stimulants such as coffee or cigarettes to keep them awake and sedatives such as alcohol or sleeping pills to help them sleep. Avoid such aids as they only have short-term effects on alertness as tolerance to their effects develops. Persistent use may also increase the risk of dependence.

Physical fitness and a healthier lifestyle
An unhealthy lifestyle combined with shift work may increase the likelihood of sleep disorders and sleep loss or exacerbate existing sleep problems. A good diet, regular meals and exercise can improve sleep quality, health and wellbeing.

Family and friends
Working shifts that differ from the routines of friends and family can leave you feeling isolated and it is important to make the effort not to lose contact with them:

Ways to improve your alertness at work
On some shifts, such as nights and very early mornings you may find it difficult to remain alert and this can affect your performance. It may also increase the risk of errors, injury and accidents. You may find it helpful to: