Sleep We all know that
the normal human daily cycle of activity is of some 7-8 hours’ sleep alternating
with some 16-17 hours’ wakefulness and that, broadly speaking, the sleep
normally coincides with the hours of darkness. Our present concern is with how
easily and to what extent this cycle can be modified. The
question is no more academic one. The case, for example, with which people can
change from working in the day to working at night is a question of growing
importance in industry where automation calls insistently for round the clock
working of machines. It normally takes from five days to one week for a person
to adapt to a reversed routine of sleep and wakefulness, sleeping during the day
and working at night. Unfortunately it is often the case in industry that shifts
are changed every week; a person may work from 12 midnight to 8 a.m. one week, 8
a.m. to 4 p.m. the next, and 4 p.m. to 12 midnight the third and so on.
This means that no sooner has he got used to one routine than he has to change
to another, so that much of his time is spent neither working nor
sleeping very efficiently. One answer would seem to be longer
periods on each shift, a month, or even three months. Recent research by Bonier
of the Netherlands, however, has shows that people on such systems will revert
to their normal habits of sleep and wakefulness during the weekend and that this
is quite enough to destroy any adaptation to night work built up during the
week. The only real solution appears to be to hand over the
night shift to a corps of permanent night workers whose nocturnal wakefulness
may persist through all weekend and holidays. An interesting study of the
domestic life and health of night shift workers was carried out by Brown. She
found a high incidence of disturbed sleep, digestive disorder and domestic
disruption among those on alternating day and night shifts, but no abnormal
occurrence of these symptoms among those on permanent night work. According to the passage, the main problem about night work is that
______.
A. people hate the inconvenience of working on night shifts
B. your life is disturbed by changing from day to night routines and
back
C. not all industries work at the same hours
D. it is difficult to find a corps of good night workers