All Stories
All Impact Stories
5
Minute Read

MSU Researchers Call for an End to Daylight Saving Time To Protect People Who Have Diabetes

Written by
Maureen Perideaux
Published on
September 16, 2024

Katie Sullivan has type 1 diabetes and uses an insulin pump. She is also a health care professional. During the last daylight saving time, or DST, change, she accidentally shifted the settings on her pump from a.m. to p.m. and received an incorrect dose of insulin, which caused an unexpected increase in her blood glucose level.

Sullivan developed hyperglycemia because she was not getting enough insulin during the day. Fortunately, she caught the error before going to bed, when the altered insulin dose could have had damaging effects.

Sullivan, a nurse practitioner at the Michigan State University Health Care Endocrinology Clinic, shared her experience with colleagues Saleh Aldasouqi, professor in the Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism at the MSU College of Human Medicine who also practices at MSU Health Care, and Howard Teitelbaum, professor in the Department of Family and Community Medicine in the MSU College of Osteopathic Medicine.

Together, they authored an article on the difficulties of DST, which was published in Clinical Diabetes, a journal of the American Diabetes Association.

“How much difference does an hour make?” Aldasouqi posed. “If you’re a person with diabetes who uses an insulin pump, it could mean the difference between well-being and disaster.”  

Sullivan is far from alone in facing the risk of incorrect insulin dosing due to time change errors. An estimated 400,000 people in the U.S. with type 1 diabetes use an insulin pump, and both Aldasouqi and Sullivan have seen patients who struggle with issues related to DST.

“Although many high-tech devices with clocks adjust to time changes automatically, most insulin pumps do not,” Aldasouqi added. “This glitch requires manual resetting which can lead to mistakes.”

On behalf of all patients who use insulin pumps, Aldasouqi calls for legislators to end DST. Here in Michigan, Senate Bill 770 was introduced in March and proposes to put the matter to a statewide vote this November. However, the bill never moved past the Committee on Government Operations.

While DST remains in effect, Aldasouqi believes that manufacturers should be obligated to equip insulin pumps with the ability to automatically update for DST changes — as well as time zone changes — to safeguard against resetting errors.

Until DST is discontinued, or insulin pumps have automatic time updating, Aldasouqi said patients who use insulin pumps should take care when resetting their devices to spring forward and fall back.

No items found.

No items found.
Maureen Perideaux
Author Email
Author Email
No items found.
News

MSU Health Sciences News

Get the latest updates on our programs and initiatives.

Five Years After COVID-19 Shutdown, 20 MSU Experts Share Lessons Learned, Lasting Impacts and Outlook

Vaccines, work from home, online learning, curbside pickup and masks became part of the daily routine as states issued stay-home orders in March 2020 to reduce the spread of COVID-19.

Ingham County Students Benefit From MSU Violence Prevention Program. Lincoln Park Students Are Next.

The goal of preventive medicine is to find and treat problems before they become major health issues. Prevent 2 Protect — an MSU initiative that recently began supporting the community through schools in Ingham County and will soon expand to Wayne County — uses a similar approach with high-risk students to prevent acts of targeted violence.

The Rising Threat of Xylazine in Michigan

Xylazine use is on the rise, particularly in the Midwest, where overdose cases involving the drug have increased by 500% in recent years, according to the Office of National Drug Control Policy.