logo
The Wirecutter Show Bonus Episode: How to Survive Daylight Saving Time

The Wirecutter Show Bonus Episode: How to Survive Daylight Saving Time

New York Times04-03-2025

ROSIE: Hey, it's Rosie from The Wirecutter Show , and this is a special bonus episode called How to Survive Daylight Saving Time. This coming Sunday, March 9th, marks the start of Daylight Saving Time, or DST, the time of year we spring ahead and advance our clocks forward one hour. We spend the majority of our year in DST, and we'll be in DST all the way to November when we revert back to standard time.
For most people, these biannual time changes are simply part of life. Minor inconveniences.
But there's a bit more to it than that. Scientists and researchers have studied the effects of time change into DST and found it can negatively impact our health. Caira, the co-host of our show, has reported on sleep hygiene and in particular, the things you can do to prepare your body for the time shift and some tips on how best to adjust. I'm going to talk with her all about it after a quick break. We'll be right back.
ROSIE: Hello, Caira.
CAIRA: Hi.
ROSIE: Caira, I understand we're about to head into your least favorite part of the year.
CAIRA: Yeah. I really don't like this part of the year, which is when we start Daylight Saving Time, and it starts on March 9th at 2:00 AM local time this year.
ROSIE: So the saying is "Spring forward, fall back." That means we're going to be losing an hour of sleep right when Daylight Savings starts, right?
CAIRA: Right. But it's actually worse than that. Some people kind of look forward to this time because the evenings are brighter. And that's kind of fun in the summer especially, but it does come at a cost. Studies have shown that even something as slight as a one-hour time shift can disrupt our circadian rhythms, which is basically just our body's internal 24-hour clock that follows the sun. This can lead to jet lag-type symptoms, and that's just because your body clock isn't aligning with the social clock. So basically, your phone will say that it's 3:00 PM, but our bodies know it's actually 2:00 PM. And this mismatch can lead to a number of health issues. You might feel it when you have a hard time falling asleep or a hard time waking up in the morning. But after the spring shift specifically, according to the National Institutes of Health, car accidents, heart attacks, and certain kinds of strokes spike during this time.
ROSIE: So the natural next question is why do we do this to ourselves? For all these years, I just do it, and assume that this is part of everybody's life. But why?
CAIRA: It's not like we, the individuals, are doing it. But something that you might have heard is that farmers need it, but that's actually not true. Daylight Saving really benefits big corporations. It's about gas companies, golf clubs, and gardening tools being sold more because people are outside in the summertime spending money.
ROSIE: Aha.
CAIRA: Mm-hmm. So it's all about capitalism. But farmers actually notoriously hate Daylight Saving because it's completely opposed to their schedules, which follows the sun, as our body should be doing too.
ROSIE: Right, right, right.
CAIRA: So we actually get 4.5 months of Standard Time, which is the actual right time, and then almost eight months of Daylight Saving. So that's so much more time in DST. And most people think that this time shift twice a year is at worst, annoying and confusing. You figure you gain an hour of sleep in the fall, even though it gets dark in the evenings, but then you get longer days in the summer. But actually, Daylight Saving is pretty bad for us year-round. A 2024 study found that Standard Time, which is what we're leaving right now to enter Daylight Saving Time, is the optimal choice for health and for safety.
ROSIE: Following the sun.
CAIRA: Yes.
ROSIE: Essentially.
CAIRA: Mm-hmm.
ROSIE: So it can feel like you're trying to pull yourself through severe jet lag. And it's so hard for me to fall asleep at a reasonable time around the shift. So as we are getting ready to prep for this time shift, what is your best advice to help people get to bed at a reasonable hour and sort of mitigate some of these effects?
CAIRA: So let's say you usually go to bed by 10 PM. You want to start shifting your routine on Wednesday before the shift that happens that Sunday morning. So that would be tomorrow, in this case. You've got to get on it. And all you're going to do is just shift in 15-minute increments starting on Wednesday, so your body is ready to sleep by 9 PM that Saturday before the time switch happens. And you just do that in 15-minute increments every day.
And the same goes for your eating schedule too. So if you're going to be going to sleep earlier, that means you need to eat a little bit earlier so your body isn't trying to digest that food as you're trying to wind down because that will keep you up. It also might seem like common sense, but don't do things like drink caffeine or alcohol before going to bed, especially caffeine. You want to give yourself at least six hours to fully digest that before you start your wind down routine.
ROSIE: So a lot of this stuff is guidance for good sleep hygiene in general.
CAIRA: Yeah.
ROSIE: And also, it seems aligned with how you might try and shift to adjust to a new time zone if you're going on vacation or you're moving somewhere.
CAIRA: Totally. And every expert that I've talked to about basically just how to have a healthy sleep routine, their biggest advice is just to get a good sleep routine, and then it's much easier to help modify or adjust it as needed. And then, if you're just having a really hard time falling asleep earlier in general, there are a couple of hacks that you can use to kind of trick your body into winding down for the night.
ROSIE: What do you got?
CAIRA: One that I use every single night that my partner hates is temperature regulation. So the optimal sleep temperature is between 60 and 67 degrees Fahrenheit.
ROSIE: No way.
CAIRA: Yeah. It's cold.
ROSIE: That seems really low.
CAIRA: It's cold. I'm not even going to lie. But then, when you get into your bed and it's all warm and you have the right covers, it's kind of nice. I enjoy it now. But that temperature range has been proven to signal to your body that it's time to shut down, and it will start to do that.
Another thing that you can do to jumpstart that is if you take a warm shower at night, when you get out of that shower, again your body temperature will drop, and that will also signal to your body that it's time to go to sleep. Something else that is really beneficial during this time is light regulation. So you want to kill as much light as possible in the early evenings so you're not staying awake later into the night. And then, when you wake up in the morning, because you know it's so dark in the beginning of Daylight Saving Time, you just want to get as much sunlight as possible as soon as possible. So blackout curtains are really helpful for keeping that light out. And then, when you wake up, just open them up, get some sun.
ROSIE: Flood your place with sun.
CAIRA: Mm-hmm. If you don't want to go out and buy blackout curtains, I get it. If you have an eye mask laying around or even a dark t-shirt would work.
ROSIE: And we'll throw links to the eye mask and blackout curtain recommendations in our show notes.
CAIRA: Mm-hmm. And then, everybody knows this at this point, even if we don't follow it, myself included. But try to limit devices at night, because the blue light, again, signals to your brain that it's wake up time, not go to sleep time. So that means your TV, your laptop, your cell phones, they all emit this blue light that is keeping your brain awake. So try to kill that as much as possible.
ROSIE: What my kids call waking up time. "Is it waking up time?"
CAIRA: Aw, that's cute.
ROSIE: Or in the evenings, "Is it time for nap?" So again, a lot of this guidance really is general sleep hygiene guidance, but really becomes even more important when you're trying to adjust your body to experience this time shift away from the sun's clock.
CAIRA: Yeah.
ROSIE: So what about when you wake up, beyond getting the sun in there as boldly as possible? I'm worried it's going to feel impossible to get my kids out of bed in the morning when it's still dark, nevermind myself.
CAIRA: No, it is really hard to fight that early morning grogginess because it's so dark. So I live in a basement apartment. My bedroom is in the basement. And something that I use year round is a sunrise alarm clock to basically just simulate warm sunlight in my room when I'm waking up in the morning. I like the Hatch, but our official pick is the Phillips alarm clock. And then also, this isn't the sun, but turn on the lights, get up out of bed, put your phone alarm somewhere far so you have to get out of bed to go turn it off.
ROSIE: Anything to signal your brain that the lights are on, it's day.
CAIRA: Mm-hmm. Yeah.
ROSIE: It might not feel like day in your body, but it is day.
CAIRA: Exactly. Anything to tell your body to go get it. This is a bit too far even for me, but if you can get out into the sun and do something active, that is the best thing you can do for your body during this time. Go for a run, do some yoga next to a window, just anything to really get your body moving and signaling again that it's time to start your day.
ROSIE: Low-hanging fruit, maybe you could walk out if you have a balcony. If you have a front door, stepping out with your morning coffee just to sort of get yourself flooded with a little bit of sun is going to, again, help signal your brain and your body that it's morning, it's time to rock.
CAIRA: Exactly.
ROSIE: Okay, so Caira, if you could recommend one thing, just one thing that is going to help pull people through this shift, what is it going to be?
CAIRA: I'm going to sound like a broken record, but it's light, light, light. Block it at night, get it in the morning.
ROSIE: Love it. All right, Caira, thanks for the tips.
CAIRA: Of course.
ROSIE: Next time we meet, I think we're going to talk about vacuums.
CAIRA: I'm excited.
ROSIE: Stay tuned. If you want to find out more about Wirecutter's coverage on Daylight Saving Time, or if you want to check out the products Caira recommended today, go to NYTimes.com/Wirecutter, or you can find a link in the show notes. Wishing you a peaceful transition into Daylight Saving Time. Thanks so much for listening.
The Wirecutter Show is executive produced by me and produced by Abigail Keel. Engineering support from Maddy Masiello and Nick Pittman. Today's episode was mixed by Sonia Herrero. Original music by Dan Powell, Marion Lozano, Elisheba Ittoop, and Diane Wong. Wirecutter's Deputy Publisher and General Manager is Cliff Levy. Ben Frumin is Wirecutter's Editor in Chief. Thank you for listening.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Federal cuts force families to make difficult, and potentially deadly, choices
Federal cuts force families to make difficult, and potentially deadly, choices

Yahoo

time19 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Federal cuts force families to make difficult, and potentially deadly, choices

A mother rushes into the emergency department cradling her 6-month-old baby. He is lethargic, seizing and in critical condition. The cause? Severely low sodium levels in his blood — a result of formula diluted with extra water to make it last longer. With grocery prices climbing and her SNAP benefits running out before the end of the month, she felt she had no other choice. This story is not an outlier. Pediatric clinicians across Wisconsin are seeing the real and devastating consequences of policies that fail to prioritize the health and well-being of children and families. And now, the situation could get worse. The Trump Administration's proposed 'skinny' budget for Fiscal Year 2026 includes deep and dangerous cuts to federal programs that form the backbone of public health in our communities. These proposed reductions include: $18 billion from the National Institutes of Health – stalling critical pediatric research and innovation $3.5 billion from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention – compromising disease surveillance, immunization programs, and emergency response efforts $1.73 billion from the Health Resources and Services Administration – cutting access to essential primary and preventive care services for children and families $674 million from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services – threatening the Medicaid and CHIP programs that provide health coverage to nearly half of Wisconsin's children. Opinion: We asked readers about wake boats on Wisconsin lakes. Here's what you said. And as if that weren't enough, further reductions to SNAP and other nutrition support programs are also on the table. These aren't just numbers on a spreadsheet. These are lifelines. Vital services that help children survive and thrive. When families can't afford formula, when clinics lose funding for immunization programs, when children lose health coverage, the consequences are immediate and, in many cases, irreversible. As front-line providers, we witness this every day. We can do better. Our federal budget is a reflection of our national values. It should not balance its books on the backs of our youngest and most vulnerable. I implore Wisconsin's elected officials to reject this harmful budget proposal. Think of that infant in the emergency room. Think of the thousands of other children across our state whose health and future depend on robust public health infrastructure, access to care, and support for families in need. We urge lawmakers to work toward a bipartisan budget that invests in children, strengthens public health, and protects the building blocks of a healthy society. Wisconsin's children deserve every opportunity to grow up healthy and strong. Our chapter of the National Association of Pediatric Nurse Practitioners stands ready to partner in this effort. Let's move forward — not backward — when it comes to the health of our children. Christine Schindler is a critical care pediatric nurse practitioner at Children's WI, a clinical professor at Marquette University, and the President of the Wisconsin Chapter of Pediatric Nurse Practitioners. She has been caring for critically ill and injured children for almost 30 years. All opinions expressed are her own. This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Trump budget jeopardizes health of American children | Opinion

Peeing frequently at night? Here's what that could mean, according to health experts.
Peeing frequently at night? Here's what that could mean, according to health experts.

USA Today

time2 days ago

  • USA Today

Peeing frequently at night? Here's what that could mean, according to health experts.

Peeing frequently at night? Here's what that could mean, according to health experts. Show Caption Hide Caption What causes urinary tract infections? A UTI is an infection of your bladder, kidneys or the tubes that connect them, typically caused by bacteria entering the urinary tract. Cover Media - Shareable It's 2 a.m., and you know the blinding light you just flickered on to use the bathroom is about to ruin your sleep. But when you've got to go, you've got to. Nocturia, known colloquially as frequent nighttime urination, is common. More than 50 million people in the U.S. suffer, according to the National Institutes of Health's (NIH) National Library of Medicine. And roughly half of adults over the age of 65 have reported getting up at least once every night to use the bathroom. "Waking up to urinate can either be a warning sign or an actual sign of a health issue you may not be aware of or a health issue that is not being properly treated," Dr. Justin Dubin, a urologist and men's health specialist at Memorial Healthcare System in South Florida and a co-host of the Man Up podcast, tells USA TODAY. First, let's be clear about how nighttime urination is actually counted. Nocturia refers to urinating after a period of sleep, so simply heading to the bathroom after sundown doesn't count. Nocturia can be caused by a number of factors, including sleep disorders, excessive urine production, problems with bladder capacity and hormonal issues, per NIH. Sometimes, waking up to go to the bathroom is just waking up to go to the bathroom. But how do you know when it's an issue worth bringing up to a doctor? Here's what medical professionals say. Is your pee cloudy? Here's what medical experts say that could mean. How many times is it normal to urinate at night? Waking up once a night every once in a while is usually OK, Dubin says. But you should generally be able to sleep six to eight hours without having to do so. "Consistently waking up two or more times every night? That is considered abnormal," he adds. If you feel like you fit the description of nocturia, it may be worth it to take stock of how much fluid you're consuming two hours before bedtime, "especially alcohol and caffeine," which are both diuretics, meaning they make you urinate more frequently, Dubin notes. Hmm: Certain foods can cause changes in urine, but so can medical conditions. Know the signs. Why am I peeing so much? Frequent nighttime urination can sometimes be an indicator of further health issues, experts say. Sometimes it isn't; Certain medications that are classified as diuretics, such as water pills, some heart medications and lithium can be the culprit. If that's the case, you can ask your doctor if you'd benefit from taking the medication in the morning, rather than right before bed. But even if your nocturia isn't a warning sign for other health issues, the loss of sleep is likely enough reason to seek help. "It is worth bringing up to your doctor, especially if it bothers you," Dubin says. "There are a lot of possible causes for you to be waking up at night and talking to your doctor will allow them to appropriately evaluate your history, your lifestyle and your overall health to see what is causing you to wake up at night. If you have specific health issues like diabetes, high blood pressure or prostate issues, the solution to your problem is treating your health issues." Health experts will typically recommend patients try a mix of behavioral therapy, lifestyle changes and medication to relieve significant nocturia, according to the NIH. "Like anything with your health, if something feels off or bothers you, it's important you go talk with a doctor," Dubin says. "Remember, we can't help you if you don't come in to talk with us."

Taurine Might Not Be the Anti-Aging Miracle We Hoped For
Taurine Might Not Be the Anti-Aging Miracle We Hoped For

Gizmodo

time3 days ago

  • Gizmodo

Taurine Might Not Be the Anti-Aging Miracle We Hoped For

New research hasn't found any connection between taurine levels in the blood and our age. You might want to hold off on stockpiling taurine supplements as part of your anti-aging cocktail. Research published today failed to find evidence that our levels of taurine shrink as we get older, contrary to some earlier studies. Scientists at the National Institutes of Health led the research, published Thursday in Science. They analyzed long-running data from past human, mice, and monkey studies, finding that taurine levels didn't change much over time and widely varied between individual animals. The results suggest that taurine isn't a good marker for age and throw into doubt the idea that it can prolong healthy aging. 'Circulating taurine doesn't decline with age in healthy individuals of these three mammalian species across the adult lifespan,' said lead study researcher Maria Emilia Fernandez, a postdoctoral fellow in the Translational Gerontology Branch of the NIH's National Institute on Aging, in a press conference Tuesday announcing the findings. Taurine is a semi-essential and important micronutrient. Our bodies naturally produce taurine, though it can also easily be found in animal products, supplements, and energy drinks (people once collected taurine from bulls, but it's now produced synthetically). Taurine plays many roles in the body, such as helping us make bile acid and keeping our blood pressure stable. In recent years, some studies have indicated that taurine—or rather, the loss of taurine—might also be a key driver of our worsening health as we get older. A 2023 study that looked at several different animal models, for instance, found that taurine levels circulating in the blood appeared to decline as the animals aged. When the researchers added taurine supplements to the animals' diets, it appeared to slightly extend the lifespan of mice and worms in addition to improving the health of older monkeys. The study also found an association between lower taurine levels in humans and an increased risk of age-related diseases. Though this wasn't the first research to suggest taurine's anti-aging potential, it certainly sparked people's attention, including the authors behind this latest research. Not every bit of research on the topic has supported this link, however, and many studies have only analyzed taurine in people and animals at a single point in time or for a relatively brief period. The researchers behind the new study wanted to take a closer look at how these levels fluctuated over time across different species and in both males and females. They turned to other existing studies or projects involving people, mice, and rhesus monkeys that had longitudinal data on taurine levels in the blood—meaning they could track these levels across the lifespan. Overall, they found that taurine levels didn't decline in any of the animals or humans they studied; if anything, taurine levels usually increased over time in different groups (the sole exception being male mice). They also found that differences in taurine levels between individuals could sometimes vary significantly, and that these differences were usually larger than the changes seen over an animal's lifetime. In other words, there doesn't appear to be much of a connection at all between taurine and aging, at least in this research. 'On the basis of these findings, we conclude that low circulating taurine concentrations are unlikely to serve as a good biomarker of aging,' the researchers wrote. These are still findings from a single study, so more research will be needed to settle the question. The results also don't mean that taurine isn't important to our health. And it is still possible that low taurine levels can contribute to chronic health problems, including conditions that become more common as we age. Likewise, there may be some older people with low taurine who would benefit from increasing their intake. Vijay Yadav, one of the authors behind the 2023 study, and his colleagues are currently running a randomized clinical trial testing whether taurine supplements can improve the health and fitness of middle-aged adults. He expects the trial to conclude by the end of 2025, with analysis coming soon after. For now, though, Yadav isn't saying that people should be downing taurine like it's candy. 'We cannot really recommend any supplementation. We need to have a better understanding if it does or it does not [improve health]; that can only be addressed by a placebo controlled trial,' said Yadav in the same press conference Tuesday. 'And of course there are a lot more questions that need to be addressed before you can really understand the biology to more depth of a particular molecule.' While there are certainly things people can already do to stay healthier into their golden years, such as exercising regularly, the track record for anti-aging drugs or supplements overall remains spotty for the time being. And it seems that a universal fountain of youth—if we can ever truly find it—probably won't contain any taurine.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store