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Wellbeing for Men

Supporting Men's Wellbeing

Practical advice, tools, and resources to support men's physical and mental wellbeing, helping you stay healthy, resilient, and at your best.

Food for Men Working Long Shifts

When you’re halfway through a 12-hour shift, food often becomes about convenience rather than nutrition. But the choices you make throughout the day can affect your energy, concentration and recovery long after you’ve clocked off.

For men working across healthcare and social care, eating well doesn’t have to mean preparing elaborate meals or carrying a lunchbox full of expensive ingredients.

Sometimes, it’s simply about making slightly better choices.

A 5-Minute Breakfast Is Better Than No Breakfast

If you’re leaving the house before sunrise, breakfast is often the first thing to be sacrificed.

Instead, try options that take just a few minutes:

  • Porridge with berries and a spoonful of peanut butter.
  • Greek yoghurt with fruit and granola.
  • Wholemeal toast with eggs.
  • Overnight oats prepared the evening before.
  • A banana with a handful of unsalted nuts if you’re really short on time.

Starting your shift with some protein and slow-release carbohydrates can help keep your energy more stable throughout the morning.

Build a Better Lunch

The ideal shift meal should keep you full without leaving you feeling sluggish.

Aim to include:

  • Lean protein such as chicken, turkey, tuna, eggs or beans.
  • Wholegrain carbohydrates like brown rice, wholemeal wraps or pasta.
  • Plenty of vegetables or salad.
  • A piece of fruit for later in the shift.

Protein helps keep you feeling fuller for longer and supports muscle maintenance, particularly if your role is physically demanding.

When the Vending Machine Is Your Only Option

We’ve all been there. The ward is busy, the café is closed and the vending machine is the only choice.

Rather than aiming for perfection, look for the better option available.

Consider swapping:

  • Chocolate bar → Protein bar or nuts.
  • Crisps → Popcorn or baked snacks.
  • Sugary fizzy drink → Water or no-added-sugar drinks.
  • Pastries → Oat-based snack or plain crackers.

One healthier choice every shift soon adds up.

Don’t Wait Until You’re Thirsty

Even mild dehydration can affect concentration, energy levels and physical performance.

Keep a refillable water bottle nearby and take regular drinks whenever your workload allows.

If plain water becomes boring, try adding slices of lemon, lime or cucumber for flavour.

Be Smart With Caffeine

Tea and coffee are part of healthcare life.

Caffeine can improve alertness, especially during demanding shifts, but timing matters.

If you’re finishing a day shift, try to avoid large amounts of caffeine late in the afternoon if it’s likely to interfere with your sleep.

For night workers, caffeine may be most useful earlier in the shift rather than during the final few hours, when it could make it harder to sleep once you get home.

The goal isn’t to avoid caffeine—it’s to use it wisely.

Overnight Shift Snacks That Keep You Going

Heavy meals at 3am rarely leave you feeling your best.

Instead, choose lighter snacks that provide steady energy, such as:

  • Greek yoghurt.
  • Cottage cheese with wholegrain crackers.
  • Apple slices with peanut butter.
  • Mixed nuts.
  • Hummus with carrot or cucumber sticks.
  • Boiled eggs.
  • A small wholemeal wrap with chicken or turkey.

Eating little and often may feel more comfortable than one large meal during the night.

Recovery Starts After the Shift

The meal you eat after work matters too.

A balanced meal containing lean protein, vegetables and wholegrain carbohydrates can help replenish energy stores and support recovery before you rest.

If you’re heading straight to bed after a night shift, keep your meal light enough that it doesn’t interfere with your sleep.

Progress, Not Perfection

Healthcare is unpredictable. Some days you’ll eat exactly as planned. Other days you’ll survive on toast, coffee and whatever you can grab between patients. That’s okay.

Don’t judge your health by one shift.

Focus on making good choices most of the time, preparing where you can and remembering that looking after your own nutrition helps you continue looking after everyone else.

This article is intended for general wellbeing information only and should not replace personalised dietary or medical advice. If you have a medical condition or specific nutritional needs, speak to your GP or a registered dietitian.

Posted by:
Mehala
Editorial Assistant – The Daily Round

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