The time change doesn’t make you sleep worse… it’s the time you have dinner

by time news

“You have to have breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince and dinner like a beggar”. This is advice from the well-known Galician psychiatrist Jesús Fraiz, who explains that having a late dinner affects more night rest and in abundance than a time change like the one that materializes this weekend.

The winter schedule that began last October ends this Sunday, so that At 2:00 a.m., clocks will have gone forward one hour.until 3:00, as established by a controversial European directive that all member states must comply with.

Fraiz downplays the problem that this clockwise movement can cause because he understands that it will only have a real impact for a couple of weeks: “Many patients are affected by the change because they sleep badly, and they feel worse, but it is a matter of time to adapt to the new schedule”. And in a short time, deepen.

Thus, for this specialist there is another factor that influences much more in the lack of sleep: food. In his opinion, more important than the time change would be to bring forward the dinner time in Spain: “It is essential to have a good sleep, people would have fewer nightmares and digestion would be much better”, he points out.

Many citizens with problems of this style have passed through his clinic. It reminds everyone of an old saying, the one that begins this Time.news and that he never tires of repeating. Paying attention to it will help, in the opinion of this doctor, to reduce the probability of deficits in the moodmore “important” than the temporary harmful effects that the time change can cause.

Although the European Union recommended that member states end these time changes, it did so before the pandemic and the arrival of the coronavirus prevented that decision from being taken.

“The pandemic has triggered the coronafobiathe fear of contagion, and people have become less sociable,” says Fraiz, who emphasizes the importance of recovering habits that were good and modifying others that are not so good.

We sleep less than the rest of Europe

“Advance dinner or television viewing hours” is key, he repeats over and over again.

In this he agrees with Gonzalo Pin Arboledas, head of the sleep unit at Hospital Quirónsalud Valencia, who has indicated that “we sleep about 40 minutes lesss than in the rest of European countries due to our schedules, and this time change favors that loss of sleep more.”

There are studies that affirm that the maintenance of a permanent schedule helps to regulate the Cardiac rhtyms of the organism, which during the time change are altered.

“But not all people are the same”, settles Fraiz, who goes further: “When only there is a change timeThe differences are not very big either.

In this sense, Pin Arboledas considers that the time change that comes into force already “gives us more light at night and delays the time to sleep, but the time to wake up remains the same, which is associated with the increase in chronic sleep deficit in general in the population.

Another point of view, a third and last one, is that of the scientist from the University of Santiago de Compostela (USC) Jorge Mira, who is one of those who conscientiously defends the time change, since, according to his research, it allows optimizing the use of sunlight and, in this way, make the most of the morning and get more hours of daytime leisure.

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