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AuthorHabeeba, Ummu
AuthorRahman, Mohammad Usman Asad
AuthorPerez, Maria Salvador
AuthorRamirez, Salam AlMoghrabi
AuthorKhan, Bilal Uddin
AuthorKuttikrishnan, Shilpa
AuthorSilang, John Paul Ben Tabar
AuthorAl Kaabi, Noora Ahmed Kh A.
AuthorKhan, Abdul Quaiyoom
AuthorRaza, Afsheen
AuthorMohamed Ibrahim, Mohamed Izham
AuthorUddin, Shahab
AuthorPrabhu, Kirti S.,
Available date2025-09-01T11:13:12Z
Publication Date2025-06-15
Publication NameClinical Epidemiology and Global Health
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cegh.2025.102088
CitationPrabhu, K. S., Habeeba, U., Rahman, M. U. A., Perez, M. S., Ramirez, S. A., Khan, B. U., ... & Uddin, S. (2025). Association between metabolic risk, oxidative stress and psychological parameters amongst sample of nurses working in Doha, Qatar. Clinical Epidemiology and Global Health, 102088.
ISSN2452-0918
URIhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213398425001770
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/66955
AbstractBackgroundShift workers are recognized to experience circadian rhythm disturbances, metabolic risks, and oxidative stress, increasing their susceptibility to numerous diseases. This study compared day and rotating shift nurses' metabolic, oxidative, and psychological profiles. MethodsA random sample of 212 eligible employees from a tertiary care hospital at Hamad Medical Corporation in Doha, Qatar, were assessed for anthropometric and laboratory parameters related to metabolic risk, oxidative stress and psychological impact. ResultsDescriptive and inferential statistics (alpha = 0.05) were applied in this study. Unlike previous investigations, our study demonstrated no statistically significant correlation between changed metabolic, oxidative, and psychological profiles among nurses working day shifts compared to rotating shifts. Although abdominal obesity was slightly more prevalent among rotational workers (68.7 % vs. 63.3 %), this difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.457). Our analysis revealed that RANTES and IL9 were expressed in higher amounts amongst rotational shift duty workers. ConclusionThe study results imply that, even if not much changes were observed in metabolic and psychological differences, rotating shift workers' immunological changes might have been influenced by disruptions in their circadian rhythms. Prolonged monitoring and interventions are advised to mitigate the health hazards linked to shift work.
Languageen
PublisherElsevier
SubjectBody mass index
Cytokines
Metabolic
Oxidative levels
TitleAssociation between metabolic risk, oxidative stress and psychological parameters amongst sample of nurses working in Doha, Qatar
TypeArticle
Volume Number34
Open Access user License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
ESSN2213-3984
dc.accessType Open Access


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