Not Boarded Any Flight And Still Monday Feels Like A Jetlag? You Are Not Alone

Updated Dec 17, 2025 | 08:00 PM IST

SummaryMillions of Indians feel jetlagged every Monday without travelling anywhere. This exhaustion stems from social jetlag, a mismatch between biological clocks and work or school schedules. Late nights, early mornings, and weekend catch-up sleep disrupt hormones, metabolism, and mental health, quietly worsening India’s growing sleep deprivation crisis across age groups nationwide.
You Also Have Two Sleep Times: One For Weekdays, One For Weekends? You May Be A Victim Of Social Jetlagged

Credits: iStock

It is Monday morning and your alarm rings at 6am. You hit snooze at least twice and feel why weekends are so short. A little bit rewind to two days back, Friday night after work, you did some binge watching and slept till noon on Saturday and again woke up late on Sunday. By evening, you finally felt like a human and again in a few hours, Monday came in. Your body, still confused, groggy, and also a slightly resentful. You feel like you are jetlagged even though you have not even boarded a flight.

This is not laziness or poor discipline, this is social jetlag. Many Indians are living through it. Many of us have two sleep times. One for weekdays and one for the weekends and if you are on a roaster, then your sleeping time adjusts according to your off-days. But the truth is you are not sleeping enough at least for the five days you work and make up for it on your off days. This is what scientists call a social jet lag and it is raising long-term health risks.

What Exactly Is Social Jetlag?

A 2012 study by Till Roenneberg explains that the term 'social jetlag' refers to the mismatch between your biological clock and your social clock. Your biological clock is governed by circadian rhythms, internal processes that decide when you feel sleepy or alert. Your social clock is set by work timings, school schedules, household responsibilities, and social expectations.

Most people sleep earlier and wake up earlier on weekdays because they have to. On weekends, they sleep later and wake up later to recover lost sleep. Researchers describe this as similar to flying across time zones and back every week, except your environment does not change. The sun rises at the same time, but your sleep does not.

Studies suggest that nearly 80 percent of people experience some degree of irregular sleep by shifting sleep times between weekdays and weekends. This pattern has become common due to artificial lighting, late-night screen exposure, and work schedules that are misaligned with natural circadian preferences.

Modern Life Makes It Worse, Here's Why

Artificial light has quietly changed how humans interact with night and day. Evening exposure to bright lights from phones, televisions, and laptops delays the body’s internal clock. This makes it harder to fall asleep early, even when you need to wake up early the next morning.

Over time, this weakens the natural cues that tell the body when it is time to rest and when it is time to be active. Researchers note that this effect creates more late chronotypes, people who naturally feel alert later at night. Unfortunately, most school and office schedules still reward early risers.

The result is a repeated pattern of sleep restriction during weekdays and catch-up sleep on weekends. Unlike travel jetlag, which resolves once the body adjusts to a new light-dark cycle, social jetlag does not correct itself. The solar cycle stays the same, while sleep timing keeps shifting back and forth.

Light is the primary driver of circadian rhythm. In the morning, exposure to sunlight tells the brain to stop producing melatonin, the hormone that makes us sleepy so we feel alert and ready for the day. By evening, melatonin production rises, pushing us toward rest. Night shifts turn this cycle upside down. Instead of winding down, the body is forced to stay active at the very hours it is wired for repair and recovery.

This constant mismatch creates what scientists call 'social jetlag. Your body never gets used to it, because it runs on an internal clock and this is why despite working the same shifts for years, you feel confused.

Indians Are Sleeping Way Less

Data from India paints a worrying picture. A nationwide LocalCircles survey found that 55 percent of Indians get less than six hours of uninterrupted sleep each night. This is an increase from 50 percent the year before, showing that sleep deprivation is getting worse, not better.

Among the reasons cited were late bedtimes combined with early household responsibilities, frequent nighttime awakenings, environmental noise, mosquitoes, and medical conditions like sleep apnea. Even those who spend enough time in bed often experience fragmented sleep.

Wearable sleep data tells a similar story. Fitbit’s global sleep analysis placed Indians as the second most sleep-deprived population after Japan. On average, Indians sleep just over seven hours a night, nearly 50 minutes less than users in the UK and significantly less than Americans. Indians also get the lowest amount of REM sleep globally, a stage critical for memory, emotional regulation, and mental health.

Social jetlag is especially pronounced among adolescents and young adults. Research consistently shows that teenagers naturally shift toward later sleep and wake times due to developmental changes. However, early school start times force them to wake up before their biological clocks are ready.

Late chronotypes accumulate sleep debt during the week and try to repay it on weekends. This pattern has been linked to higher body mass index, metabolic issues, daytime sleepiness, and poorer academic performance. Living against the clock, researchers suggest, may be quietly contributing to the rising burden of obesity and mental health concerns.

In India, academic pressure, coaching classes, screen use, and reduced parental control over sleep schedules only amplify this misalignment.

Social Jet Lag Is Not Just About Feeling Tired, It Has Grave Health Impact

Hormones take the first hit. Our body gets confused on how to regulate melatonin, which is a sleep hormone and cortisol, which is the wake up hormone. It also reduces appetite suppressing hormone leptin, while turning up the hunger hormone ghrelin. This is why you feel the midnight munchies. Chronic sleep deprivation could also lead to prediabetics, as increasing sugar cravings make it difficult for people to prioritize healthy eating.

Studies have associated it with increased risks of obesity, metabolic syndrome, and mental health disorders. It has also been linked to lower productivity, reduced concentration, and mood disturbances.

Addressing social jetlag requires more than sleep tips. Experts suggest later school start times, flexible work hours, reduced evening light exposure, and greater awareness of circadian health. Small changes, like maintaining similar sleep timings on weekdays and weekends, can help, but they cannot fully solve a systemic problem.

Until then, millions of Indians will continue waking up exhausted, wondering why rest feels so elusive.

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Romanticization And The Silent Dismissal Of Women’s Pain | Women's Day Special

Updated Mar 6, 2026 | 05:00 PM IST

SummaryWomen’s pain, from endometriosis and IUD insertions to childbirth and postpartum struggles, is often normalized or dismissed. Experts say gender bias in healthcare continues to delay diagnosis and treatment, making listening to women essential.
Romanticization And The Silent Dismissal Of Women’s Pain | Women's Day Special

Credits: Canva

Just few days ago, the world witnessed a personal documentary film bagging BAFTA Award 2026. The film is titled This Is Endometriosis. The film is a personal story of director Georgie Wileman, who was diagnosed with the condition a decade after she had first shown her symptoms. The film brings the attention back on dismissal of women's pain, which has been normalized for ages.

This is not the only instance of women's pain being dismissed. Instagram and other social media platforms are flooded with women sharing their experiences of getting intrauterine contraceptive device or an IUD inserted without anesthesia. The pain is debilitating.

Romanticization And The Silent Dismissal Of Women’s Pain | Women's Day Special

Another report, from India's capital city by PARI (People's Archive of Rural India) mentions a case of Deepa (name changed) who had a copper-T (IUD) inserted, right after her C-section. After two years, she experienced menstrual irregularities and heavy bleeding. She visited several doctors, one of whom, even dismissed it as just weakness, while prescribing calcium and iron tablets for her. In other instances, her copper-T could not be located, until she got an X-ray done, which noted: 'The copper-T is seen in situ in hemipelvis region.' The PARI report quotes West Delhi-based gynecologist Dr Jyotsna Gupta, "There are high chances that a copper-T may get tilted if it is inserted soon after delivery or a C-section.This is because in both cases the uterus cavity is enlarged then, and takes time to set itself to normal. While it is doing so, the inserted copper-T may change its axis and get tilted. It may also get displaced or get tilted if a woman experiences severe cramps during menstruation.”

The report also quotes ASHA worker Sushila Devi saying that they hear many women complaining about copper-T. "Many times, they tell us that it has 'reached their stomach' and they want to get it removed." However, like this case, in many other cases too, their pain is often ignored.

When Health and Me spoke to Dr Archana Dhawan Bajaj, gynecologist and Delhi-based IVF specialist, she said that physical pain and emotional distress in women is often normalized because the system "assumes that women's bodies are always in a state of flux and therefore leads to many women being undiagnosed or dismissed and delayed for treatment of a serious nature."

Dr Sonu Taxak, who is a senior IVF Consultant and Director at Yellow Fertility also told Health and Me that historically, women's symptoms were poorly studied, so for any pain, "hormonal fluctuation became a convenient explanation".

Read: The Hidden Cost of Extreme Fitness On Women’s Bodies | Women's Day Special

Women Bodies Are Meant To Bear Pain

A popular monologue from Fleabag says, "Women are born with pain built in." The powerful monologue is a reminder of how women carry pain and are often unheard so much so that society makes a woman believe that she is meant to bear it. While there is no scientific evidence that verifies that women have a higher pain tolerance than men (British Journal of Anaesthesia, 2013), historically their pain have been ignored. Dr Taxak points out that research consistently shows women’s pain is more likely to be dismissed as emotional or anxiety-related. "While awareness is improving, unconscious bias still exists. Pain should be evaluated based on clinical evidence, not gender-based perception."

A Guardian report from 2020 talks about how women are shamed for asking for painkillers. The report mentions Kate, who was in a 26-hour labor and when she asked for epidural, she was denied it. "The first time the midwives said I wasn't far enough along. The second time, they said I didn't need it. Finally, they said I was too far along."

Many women are shamed for asking for epidural, or are often scared. Yashasvi Arora (name changed) delivered her baby in January 2025 in a Delhi hospital said that her mother had told her to not opt for epidural as it causes chronic back problems that linger throughout one's life. However, science finds no such evidence of any claim. While back pain is common, but it does not stay forever, as notes Cleveland Clinic.

"Childbirth pain has been culturally romanticized as something to 'endure'. But medically, an epidural is a safe and evidence-based pain relief option. Choosing comfort does not diminish strength, It reflects informed decision-making," says Dr Taxak.

Romanticization And The Silent Dismissal Of Women’s Pain | Women's Day Special

Pop culture plays a significant role in romanticization of labor pain. An advertisement by Indira IVF opens with a woman in labor pain, sweating and screaming and in the next scene, she says, "This is my life's best moment". Dr Archana says, "Pain relief (i.e., epidurals) becomes defined as a form of weakness because society favors natural childbirth as a true "test of endurance." Additionally, society often manifests culture as a glorified sacrifice made by the mother and that to ask for help is a sign of failure."

The cycle of pain does not end there, women are also shamed for postpartum, with many, especially men on the internet claiming that it is not a real thing. A new trend of 'Last Generation of the Innocent Mother' has taken over the internet that glorifies mothers who did not express their problems or were often shamed for it. However, the reality is quite different from what trends on the internet.

Read: Navigating Postpartum: The Emotional and Physical Impact on New Mothers

“I am a very positive person. I know I can handle anything. So, when my friends would tell me their stories of postpartum, I would tell myself that I could handle it. I could talk myself out of it. But to my surprise, it was very difficult. My body and my mind went through so much,” says Akanksha Thapliyal, 34 from Siliguri, a creative consultant, who became a mother at 33. Thapliyal shares that there were days when she would just cry, without even knowing the reason. At times, everyone felt like her enemy, including her husband.

A mother from East Tennessee, Tiffany Toombs Clevinger, now 39, shares she was 37 when she had her baby and her first feeling was, “Oh no, what did we just do?” She was in disbelief and did not know what to do to take care of her child.

Romanticization And The Silent Dismissal Of Women’s Pain | Women's Day Special

Both mothers struggled with breastfeeding and Thapliyal also complained of pain while feeding her child. However, her mother told her that it was normal. The reality is, it was not.

"Postpartum depression is often underdiagnosed because symptoms are normalized or overlooked. While mild discomfort in breastfeeding could occur initially, persistent or severe pain is not normal," points out Dr Taxak.

Pain And Discomfort Exist Only For Men

Romanticization And The Silent Dismissal Of Women’s Pain | Women's Day Special

Birth control pill is often the burden on women, and when the idea of male contraception was first discussed in 1970s, the research came to a halt. The pill never made it to market. In November 2016, Susan Scutti reported in CNN that the study was cut short due to the side effects of the pill. The report Male birth control shot found effective, but side effects cut the study short. Another report by NPR titled Male Birth Control Study Killed After Men Report Side Effects also seconded the claim.

Read: Explained: The History Of Birth Control Pills And Other Alternative

While for women, those who are on birth control pills are prone to headaches, breast tenderness, acne, nausea, weight gain, irregular menstruation, mood changes, and decreased libido.

Dr Archana explains, the disparity of how women and men are treated medically in terms of contraceptive responsibility remains pervasive due to long-standing societal and medical expectations. "Trials for male contraceptives are often stopped due to the mildly adverse effects of men, while women have been expected to suffer similar or perhaps even more serious effects for a much longer period. Ultimately this further illustrates the gendered tolerance men have witnessed in the medical world, wherein the discomfort of women is often treated as 'the norm,' while any form of adverse side effect for men exhibits heightened scrutiny and ultimately leads to decisions to cease the trials."

Listening To Women's Pain

With such instances, it becomes more so important on International Women's Day on how much of women's pain is still being normalized instead of treated. For decades, medicine and society have often asked women to tolerate discomfort quietly.

International Women’s Day, at its core, is about recognizing women’s voices and experiences. In healthcare, that means something very practical: believing women when they say something is wrong. Because sometimes, the most powerful step toward better care is not a new technology or treatment. It is simply listening.

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How Is Today's Lifestyle Impacting Childhood Obesity in India? An Expert Explains

Updated Mar 6, 2026 | 02:00 PM IST

SummaryIndia ranks second globally in childhood obesity, with 56 million children affected, says the World Obesity Atlas 2024. Experts link the rise to screen time, ultra-processed foods and sedentary lifestyles, urging early lifestyle interventions.
How Is Today's Lifestyle Impacting Childhood Obesity in India? An Expert Explains

Credits: iStock

Childhood obesity is rapidly emerging as one of the most serious public health concerns across the world, and in India too. Once considered a problem limited to adults, excess weight is now affecting children at younger ages and increasing their risk of chronic diseases early in life.

According to The World Obesity Atlas 2024 by the World Obesity Federation, India ranks second globally in the number of children living with overweight and obesity, just behind China. The report estimates that out of 56 million children affected in the country, around 20 million are likely to be obese, while the rest are expected to fall in the overweight category.

Read: Childhood Obesity In India To Surge To 56 Million By 2040, Says Global Report

The situation is not limited to India. Globally, the number of children aged 5 to 19 years living with overweight or obesity is projected to reach 507 million by 2040, rising sharply from 419 million in 2025.

Experts say the rise is closely linked to how children eat, move, and spend their time today.

Childhood Obesity Is More Than A Cosmetic Issue

Dr Ruchi Golash, Pediatrician at CK Birla Hospitals, CMRI, explains that childhood obesity goes far beyond appearance and can have long-term health consequences.

“Excess weight in childhood is not just a cosmetic concern. It significantly increases the risk of conditions such as diabetes, high blood pressure, fatty liver disease and early heart problems,” she says.

Read: 1 In Every 8 School-going Children Is Obese In Kolkata: Study

Children who develop obesity early in life are also more likely to remain obese as adults if the issue is not addressed in time. This makes early prevention and lifestyle changes especially important.

The Role Of Excessive Screen Time

One of the biggest lifestyle changes affecting children today is the rise in screen time. From online classes and gaming to streaming videos, children are spending several hours each day in front of screens.

Dr Golash notes that this shift is contributing significantly to weight gain.

“Prolonged screen use reduces physical activity, disrupts sleep patterns and often encourages mindless snacking,” she explains.

Exposure to screens, especially before bedtime, can also interfere with hormones that regulate hunger and fullness. As a result, children may feel hungrier and eat more than their bodies need.

Ultra-Processed Foods Are Becoming The Norm

Another major factor behind rising childhood obesity is the shift in dietary habits.

Ultra-processed foods such as packaged snacks, sugary beverages, instant noodles and bakery products have become widely available and heavily marketed to children. While convenient and appealing, these foods are typically high in calories, sugar, salt and unhealthy fats.

“They are low in fibre and essential nutrients, which means children consume a lot of energy without getting adequate nutrition,” Dr Golash says.

Regular consumption of these foods can lead to rapid weight gain, insulin resistance and early metabolic problems, increasing the risk of long-term health complications.

Decline In Outdoor Play And Physical Activity

Sedentary lifestyles are another key contributor. Compared to previous generations, children today spend far less time playing outdoors.

Academic pressure, safety concerns and the lure of digital entertainment have gradually replaced active play with more sedentary activities.

“Even children who do not overeat can gain weight if they are not physically active enough,” Dr Golash explains. Reduced muscle activity slows down metabolism and allows fat to accumulate more easily in the body.

What Parents Can Do To Prevent Childhood Obesity

Experts say parents play a central role in preventing childhood obesity and helping children build healthier habits.

Dr Golash advises families to start with simple lifestyle changes such as limiting daily screen time, encouraging outdoor play and prioritizing home-cooked meals.

“Setting reasonable screen-time limits, promoting daily physical activity and reducing sugary drinks can make a significant difference in a child’s overall health,” she says.

She also emphasizes that conversations about weight should focus on healthy habits rather than appearance.

Early and supportive interventions, she adds, can help reverse unhealthy weight gain and protect a child’s long-term heart and metabolic health.

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New AI-powered blood test to detect pancreatic cancer early with 94% accuracy

Updated Mar 6, 2026 | 11:00 AM IST

SummaryPancreatic cancer is the 12th most common cancer worldwide. In 2022, there were 510,992 new cases of pancreatic cancer, with China, the US, and Japan reporting the highest number of cases globally.
New AI-powered blood test to detect pancreatic cancer early with 94% accuracy

Pancreatic cancer, which is notoriously difficult to catch early, can now be detected early with a simple blood test, but powered by artificial intelligence (AI).

The AI-based test analyzes metabolic fingerprints in a blood sample and spots pancreatic cancer at its earliest stages with up to 94 percent accuracy.

The study published in the journal Nature Communications showed that the diagnostic tool called PanMETAI can be a non-invasive and cost-effective screening tool to save lives lost due to pancreatic cancer -- one of the deadliest forms of cancer worldwide, with only a 13 percent five-year survival rate.

The tool combines with nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) metabolomics to identify pancreatic cancer with remarkable accuracy. NMR is a method that captures the unique chemical fingerprint of hundreds of metabolites in a patient's blood.

"By combining the power of AI with the rich metabolic information captured by NMR spectroscopy, we have created a tool that can detect pancreatic cancer at its earliest and most treatable stages. Our goal is to bring this technology to clinical practice so that more patients can benefit from timely diagnosis and treatment," said Yu-Ting Chang, Professor of internal medicine (gastroenterology and hepatology) at National Taiwan University, Taiwan.

The researchers noted that the PanMETAI platform enables high-precision pancreatic cancer prediction, facilitating early detection, which will enhance treatment outcomes.

Pancreatic Cancer: How PanMETAI makes early-stage detection

Pancreatic cancer is hard to treat as the symptoms are rarely seen in the initial stages, and most patients receive their diagnosis at an advanced stage, when treatment options are limited.

The PanMETAI platform tapped the current screening methods -- blood marker CA19-9 -- for early detection.

Using 500 microliters of blood serum, the platform was able to extract over 260,000 metabolic signals in the study. It then analyzed the datasets using an AI model.

By integrating these metabolic profiles with age, the cancer marker CA19-9, and a protein biomarker called Activin A, PanMETAI correctly distinguished cancer patients from high-risk controls in nearly every case, said the team.

The researchers then validated the model in an independent Lithuanian cohort of 322 participants. The results proved that the tool works reliably across diverse populations.

Further, the team found that NMR metabolomic data were essential to boost early-stage detection sensitivity.

These capture subtle metabolic shifts -- such as decreased HDL cholesterol (bad cholesterol) and glutamine (an essential protein), and elevated lactic acid, glucose, and glutamic acid -- that occur before the cancer becomes clinically apparent.

Pancreatic Cancer: A Global Health Burden

Pancreatic cancer is the 12th most common cancer worldwide.

Data from the Globocan reveal there were 510,992 new cases of pancreatic cancer in 2022, with China, the US, and Japan reporting the highest number of cases.

The pancreas is a 15cm long gland found behind the stomach and in front of the spine. The organ is key to digesting food and curbing blood sugar levels in the body.

Cancer develops in the pancreas when a change in the cells of the organ causes them to grow uncontrollably. Most pancreatic cancers start in exocrine cells, which produce digestive enzymes to help digest food and are secreted into the small intestine.

While there are hardly any early symptoms, the ones appear can include:

  • eyes or skin turning yellow (jaundice)
  • itchy skin
  • darker pee and paler poo than usual
  • loss of appetite or losing weight without trying to
  • fatigue
  • a high temperature, or feeling hot or shivery

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