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Resetting Your Circadian Rhythm as a Shift Worker

A woman sitting with her legs crossed in front of the sun rise

If you’re a shift worker, you don’t need anyone to tell you the challenges of getting some quality rest. Some days you crash the moment you get home. Other days you lie in bed wide awake, scrolling through your phone and hoping your brain finally slows down enough to let you rest.

Most of us working nights, rotating shifts, or irregular schedules don’t have a predictable routine. Me included, working in the emergency department for 12 hours can causes me to lose sense of time. We often fail to recognize the impact of not getting restorative sleep. But when this cycle becomes your “normal,” it’s often a sign of circadian rhythm disruption—your internal 24-hour clock falling out of sync with external world. 

And this isn’t just about feeling exhausted.

The NIH highlight that the long-term circadian rhythm disruption is associated with higher risks of mental health issues, cardiovascular disease, metabolic disorders, and even certain cancers. The nature of our work leaves us vulnerable to sleep disruptions. This isn’t to scare you it’s to highlight the importance of quality sleep. 

The good news? You can reset your circadian rhythm.
Your biology may not match your schedule, but with the right tools, you can teach your body a new rhythm that supports your health instead of working against it.

Let’s walk through how.

What Your Circadian Rhythm Actually Is (and Why Shift Work Disrupts It)

Your circadian rhythm is your body’s built-in clock. It regulates:

  • When you feel awake
  • When you feel tired
  • Hormones like melatonin, adenosine and cortisol
  • Body temperature
  • Digestion and metabolism
  • Mental sharpness and reaction time

Your brain relies on light as its biggest signal. Sunlight = time to wake up. Darkness = time to sleep.

But when you work nights or rotating schedules, you’re exposed to light at times your brain doesn’t anticipate. Your hormones fall out of sync. You might feel tired during work and wired when you finally get home.

This doesn’t mean you’re “bad at sleeping or you’re a light sleeper.” It means your biology is confused and you can help it find its way again. I have another blog explaining how to sleep during the day if that something you struggle with click here

How Shift Workers Can Reset Their Circadian Rhythm (Science-Backed Strategies)

1. Use Light Intentionally — Your Most Powerful Reset Tool

Research from the NIH and Harvard Health shows that light is the strongest cue your brain uses to regulate your internal clock.

Before a night shift:

  • Use a bright light therapy lamp before work 
  • This tells your brain: “the day is starting now—stay awake”

After your shift:

  • Wear sunglasses during your commute
  • Keep your home dim
  • Limit screens before bed

This prevents your brain from getting the “wake up” signal when you desperately need rest.

2. Time Your Caffeine Like a Strategy (Not a Survival Tool)

Caffeine blocks adenosine, the sleep-pressure chemical that builds up in your body throughout your waking hours.
Studies show caffeine:

  • Is 99% absorbed within 45 minutes
  • Has a half-life lasting 1.5 to 9.5 hours

If you drink coffee late in your shift, it may still be active when you’re trying to sleep.

Shift-worker caffeine rule:
 Drink caffeine in the early part of your shift
Avoid caffeine during the last 6-8 hours before bed

This helps your natural sleep pressure build again.

3. Prioritize Sleep Quantity (Not Perfection)

The CDC recommends 7–9 hours of sleep. For shift workers, that often means being flexible about how you get those hours.

Here’s a realistic pattern:

After your shift:

  • Take your longest block of sleep
  • Make your room dark, cool, and quiet—this helps trick your brain into “nighttime”

Before your shift:

  • A short nap (20–90 minutes) can boost alertness and reduce fatigue

It’s not about achieving perfect sleep—it’s about getting enough recovery to protect your health.

Conclusion 

Shift workers keep the world running maybe I’m bias. You care for patients, keep streets safe, stock our stores, operate our factories, maintain our infrastructure, and keep transportation moving.

Consequently, society wasn’t built around your schedule and your body wasn’t either.

Resetting your circadian rhythm is a way of saying:
I deserve to feel rested. I deserve to feel healthy. My body matters.

Small steps, done consistently, can change how you feel on your shift, how you recover after, and how you show up for the people you care about outside of work.

Disclaimer
I share this information to support and empower shift workers, but it is not a substitute for professional medical advice or care. Everybody and schedule is different, and what works for one person may not work for another. Please speak with a healthcare provider before making changes to your sleep routine, caffeine intake, or shift-work habits. This blog is for educational purposes only, and I am not responsible for any actions taken based on its content

Sources & Further Reading

Below is a list of all supporting articles; scientific, medical, and practical—that you can read through for further information! 

NIH – Circadian Rhythm Disorders: Treatment

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. (2024). Circadian rhythm disorders – Treatment.
https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/circadian-rhythm-disorders/treatment

NIH / PubMed – Shift Work & Health Risks

Proper, K. I., & van de Langenberg, D. (2018). The relationship between shift work and health. Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health, 44(2), 103–114.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5828540/

National Academies Press – Caffeine Absorption & Half-Life

Institute of Medicine. (2001). Caffeine for the sustainment of mental task performance: Formulations for military operations. National Academies Press.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK223808/

CDC – Sleep Recommendations

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2024). Sleep and sleep health.
https://www.cdc.gov/sleep/about/index.html

NIOSH – Health Impacts of Shift Work

National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. (2024). Work schedules: Shift work and long work hours.
https://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/workschedules

Harvard Health – Blue Light Effects

Harvard Health Publishing. (2012). Blue light has a dark side.
https://www.health.harvard.edu/staying-healthy/blue-light-has-a-dark-side

Cleveland Clinic – Shift Work Sleep Disorder

Cleveland Clinic. (2023). Shift work sleep disorder.
https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/12109-shift-work-sleep-disorder

Sleep Foundation – Managing Shift Work Disorder

Sleep Foundation. (2024). Shift work disorder.
https://www.sleepfoundation.org/shift-work-disorder

Healthline – Resetting the Circadian Rhythm

Nield, D. (2023). How to reset your circadian rhythm: 11 evidence-based tips. Healthline.
https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/reset-circadian-rhythm

BBC Future – Why Shift Work Hurts the Body

Purtill, C. (2019). Why shift work is killing you. BBC Future.
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20190319-why-shift-work-is-killing-you

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