Daylight Saving Time is used to save energy and minimise the use of artificial light. It was first used in 1908 in Canada.
Researchers at Boston Medical Centre (BMC) in the US and IVF New England said daylight savings time represents a subtle but widespread disruption to daily circadian rhythms.
The one-hour difference has been previously reported to cause negative health impacts, such as increased instances of heart attacks, but little is known regarding its impact on fertility.
"We knew that we were researching an uncharted field, and it was important for us to understand the effect a one-hour change had on patients undergoing in vitro fertilisation (IVF)," said Liu, who is now at Massachusetts General Hospital in the US.
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Researchers looked at the pregnancy and miscarriage rates among a sample of patients undergoing IVF prior to and during daylight savings time, in both the fall and spring.
The patients were then categorised into three groups based on the timing of their embryo transfer during daylight savings time.
The study found that miscarriage rates in IVF patients who had had a prior miscarriage were significantly higher among women whose embryo transfers occurred 21 days after spring DST began, compared to patients whose embryo transfers occurred before or well outside the spring DST window.
Successful pregnancy rates did not differ between seasons or among the three groups or among the three groups during the change to standard time in the fall.
The study was published in the journal Chronobiology International.