The sleep of long-haul truck drivers

M M Mitler, J C Miller, J J Lipsitz, J K Walsh, C D Wylie, M M Mitler, J C Miller, J J Lipsitz, J K Walsh, C D Wylie

Abstract

Background: Fatigue and sleep deprivation are important safety issues for long-haul truck drivers.

Methods: We conducted round-the-clock electrophysiologic and performance monitoring of four groups of 20 male truck drivers who were carrying revenue-producing loads. We compared four driving schedules, two in the United States (five 10-hour trips of day driving beginning about the same time each day or of night driving beginning about 2 hours earlier each day) and two in Canada (four 13-hour trips of late-night-to-morning driving beginning at about the same time each evening or of afternoon-to-night driving beginning 1 hour later each day).

Results: Drivers averaged 5.18 hours in bed per. day and 4.78 hours of electrophysiologically verified sleep per day over the five-day study (range, 3.83 hours of sleep for those on the steady 13-hour night schedule to 5.38 hours of sleep for those on the steady 10-hour day schedule). These values compared with a mean (+/-SD) self-reported ideal amount of sleep of 7.1+/-1 hours a day. For 35 drivers (44 percent), naps augmented the sleep obtained by an average of 0.45+/-0.31 hour. No crashes or other vehicle mishaps occurred. Two drivers had undiagnosed sleep apnea, as detected by polysomnography. Two other drivers had one episode each of stage 1 sleep while driving, as detected by electroencephalography. Forty-five drivers (56 percent) had at least 1 six-minute interval of drowsiness while driving, as judged by analysis of video recordings of their faces; 1067 of the 1989 six-minute segments (54 percent) showing drowsy drivers involved just eight drivers.

Conclusions: Long-haul truck drivers in this study obtained less sleep than is required for alertness on the job. The greatest vulnerability to sleep or sleep-like states is in the late night and early morning.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Electrographic Data Showing Sleep-Like Patterns in a 25-Year-Old Driver on the Delaying Evening Driving Schedule. This 20-second segment, recorded while the subject was driving, began at 2:24 a.m. There are slow, rolling eye movements (the large curves on the eye-movement tracings), a high level of alpha activity throughout the occipital tracing, and large peaks and troughs in the middle section of the central tracings, which are known as paroxysmal hypnagogic hypersynchrony.

Source: PubMed

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