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How ‘Shift Work Sleep Disorder’ is hurting workers—and costing employers
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How ‘Shift Work Sleep Disorder’ is hurting workers—and costing employers

Fast Company · May 25, 2026, 10:41 AM

Before most of America pours its first cup of coffee, millions of workers are already hours into their shifts, and they’re tired. Overnight warehouse workers are packing orders. Early-morning bus drivers are taking kids to school. ER nurses are handing off to the day team at 7 a.m. These workers aren’t just fatigued from long hours. Many are living with a real, diagnosable medical condition that goes unrecognized and untreated, sometimes for years. And the cost of that gap doesn’t stay invisible forever. Shift Work Sleep Disorder (SWSD) affects up to 40% of U.S. shift workers. It can cause persistent insomnia, chronic fatigue, and impaired concentration. If left untreated, the effects compound, including increased risk of depression, Type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. Workplace consequences track a similar arc. Fatigued workers have higher rates of absenteeism, more on-the-job errors, and greater injury risk. For industries like logistics, healthcare, and transportation where precision and reliability are non-negotiable, this is a meaningful operational problem with a real dollar figure attached. Luckily SWSD, along with other sleep disorders, is treatable. The access gap is the problem. Why It Goes Undiagnosed Getting diagnosed with a sleep disorder requires navigating a system that was never built for hourly workers. The standard diagnostic pathway is an overnight polysomnography (PSG) study at a sleep clinic. These studies require a patient to arrive at a facility during hours that are fundamentally incompatible with a night shift schedule. With one trained sleep specialist for every 43,000 Americans, the wait time for a referral and initial appointment can take months. At every step, the employee without scheduling flexibility faces an accessibility issue that salaried counterparts do not. This isn’t just a healthcare access problem. It’s a structural mismatch between industries with a heavy concentration of sleep disorders and

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