WASHINGTON (AP) — Most of America "springs forward" Sunday for daylight saving time. Losing that hour of sleep can do more than leave you tired and cranky the next day; it also could harm your health.

Darker mornings and more evening light knock your body clock out of whack — which means daylight saving time can usher in sleep trouble for weeks or longer. Studies have even found an uptick in heart attacks and strokes right after the March time change.

Once again, most Americans will set their clocks forward by one hour this weekend. How we came to move the clock forward in the spring, and then push it back in the fall, is a tale of that spans over more than a century.

"Falling back" as daylight saving time ends and standard time begins is good for us, according to many sleep scientists and circadian biologists.

Losing an hour of afternoon daylight may sound like a gloomy preview for the dark winter months, but the yearly ritual of falling back that affects nearly 2 billion people worldwide means a valuable hour of extra sleep, said Dr. James Herdegen, director of the sleep disorders service and research center at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago.

About 1 in 3 US adults sleep less than the recommended seven-plus hours nightly, and more than half of US teens don't get the recommended eight-plus hours on weeknights. And research suggests that chronic sleep deprivation can increase levels of stress hormones that boost heart rate and blood pressure, and of chemicals that trigger inflammation.

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