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Daylight Saving Time: Does springing forward cause heart attacks?
Episode 26

Daylight Saving Time: Does springing forward cause heart attacks?

Normal Curves: Sexy Science, Serious Statistics · Regina Nuzzo and Kristin Sainani

March 9, 20261h 4m

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Show Notes

Every year we spring forward and lose an hour of sleep. But do we also lose a few heart cells? Some headlines claim that heart attacks spike by 24% after daylight saving time begins. In this episode we trace that number back to the research behind it—and what we find is more complicated than the headlines suggest. We examine a famous New England Journal of Medicine letter, a large international meta-analysis, and a massive modern U.S. registry study. Along the way we talk about incidence ratios, relative versus absolute risk, negative controls, and a haunting concept called harvesting. Plus: why bar charts are not for numerical data, why journalists love dramatic numbers, and how a bug collector helped invent daylight saving time.


Statistical topics

  • Incidence ratios / incidence rates
  • Meta-analysis
  • Negative controls
  • Relative risk vs absolute risk
  • Statistical vs practical significance
  • Statistical Sleuthing


Methodological morals

  • “A bump in time isn’t always a bump in total.” 
  • “If you already know the story you want to tell, you can always find a number to tell it.”  



References



Kristin and Regina’s online courses: 

Demystifying Data: A Modern Approach to Statistical Understanding  

Clinical Trials: Design, Strategy, and Analysis 

Medical Statistics Certificate Program  

Writing in the Sciences 

Epidemiology and Clinical Research Graduate Certificate Program 

Programs that we teach in:

Epidemiology and Clinical Research Graduate Certificate Program 


Find us on:

Kristin -  LinkedIn & Twitter/X

Regina - LinkedIn & ReginaNuzzo.com


  • (00:00) - Intro
  • (05:03) - Strange history of daylight saving time
  • (16:06) - Swedish NEJM study
  • (19:14) - Incidence ratios explained
  • (22:13) - What the Swedish study actually found
  • (31:11) - Absolute vs relative risk
  • (34:27) - Harvesting effect
  • (40:10) - 2024 Meta-analysis
  • (45:37) - Large modern US study
  • (55:23) - Where the “24% increase” came from
  • (59:16) - Wrap-up

Topics

statisticsKristin SainaniRegina Nuzzojournal club podcaststatistics podcastscience podcastdaylight saving time and heart attackscircadian rhythmsleep disruptionincidence ratiosrelative vs absolute riskmeta-analysisnegative controlsharvesting effect