I don't think that this applies to all people. There are people that have a biorhythm that makes them nightowls.

Furthermore I worked night shifts for about a year. Not having to deal with dumbasses that make day shifts, having less noise reduces the stress in the work ours.

And domestic violence seems to be a bit far fetched deathcause of night shifts, isn't it?

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Night owls exist. That is true. But the shift is limited. No human is designed to work throughout the night. Our biochemistry precludes it. There are ways to trick these systems partially but they are imperfect. And yes, you are strictly speaking correct when it comes to mortality (not studied), but domestic violence and relationship stress in general is a significant source of morbidity for shift workers.

I should add that there will necessarily be some for whom working nights offers advantages from a scheduling standpoint. Each person has unique circumstances after all.

The point of the post however is to highlight the fact that night shift work is hazardous with a capital H, with some calling it analogous to asbestos exposure. At the same time, it is a hazard that is drastically underplayed by employers and their media/academia puppets seeking to push profits yet again at the expense of employee health.

Yep. Bit again chronobiology says that there are people that are nightowls. Their biorhythm just works the other way round.