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More sleep would make most Americans happier, healthier and safer
Findings
Many people are surprised to learn that researchers have discovered a single
treatment that improves memory, increases people's ability to concentrate,
strengthens the immune system, and decreases people's risk of being
killed in accidents. Sound to be good to be true? It gets even better.
The treatment is completely free, even for people who have no health
insurance. It also has no side effects. Finally, most people consider
the treatment highly enjoyable. Would you try it?
You probably should. For most people, this treatment would consist
of getting an extra 60-90 minutes of sleep each night. Both psychologists
and psychiatrists have been arguing for years that one of the most
significant and overlooked public health problems in the U.S. is
that many American adults are chronically sleep deprived. That is,
very few Americans regularly obtain the 8 or more hours of sleep
that almost all adults need each night. The consequences of this
chronic sleep deprivation can truly be disastrous. Laboratory experiments
on the effects of sleep deprivation have shown that failing to get
enough sleep dramatically impairs memory and concentration while
increasing levels of stress hormones and disrupting the body's normal
metabolism. Research outside the laboratory further suggests that
long term sleep deprivation leads to greater susceptibility to motor
vehicle accidents and may even lead to premature aging.
This is important because research shows that many people are
carrying a heavy "sleep debt" that they have built up from weeks,
months, or even years of inadequate sleep. In experiments on sleep
debt, researchers pay healthy volunteers to stay in bed for at least
14 hours a day for a week or more. Most people given this opportunity
sleep about 12 hours a day for several days, sometimes longer -
and then they settle into sleeping 7-9 hours per night. As William
Dement (1999) put it, "this means … that millions of us are living
a less than optimal life and performing at a less than optimal level,
impaired by an amount of sleep debt that we're not even aware we
carry."
But is carrying a sleep debt really so harmful? Careful experiments
by psychologist David Dinges and others have shown that the answer
is yes. Dinges and colleagues recruit healthy young volunteers who
live continuously in Dinges's sleep laboratory for 10-20 days. By
randomly assigning people to receive different amounts and patterns
of sleep over time, by controlling people's access to stimulants
such as caffeine, and by constantly monitoring people's physiological
states (to document the amount of sleep that people are actually
getting), Dinges has learned that people who get less than 8 hours
sleep per night show pronounced cognitive and physiological deficits,
including memory impairments, a reduced ability to make decisions,
and dramatic lapses in attention. As sleep deprivation continues
over time, these deficits only grow worse. Consistently failing
to get enough sleep is the biological equivalent of consistently
spending more money than you make. Napping can help reduce a sleep
debt, for example, but there are also long term benefits to maintaining
consistent, predictable sleep patterns. In addition, whereas naps
do improve cognitive functioning after periods of sleep deprivation,
they do not do much to repair the negative mood that results from
sleep loss (see Dinges et al., 1988).
Many people argue that they get by just fine on very little sleep.
However, research shows that only a tiny fraction of people can
truly function well on less than 8 hours sleep per night. Dinges
estimates that, over the long haul, perhaps 1 person in a thousand
can function effectively on six or fewer hours of sleep per night.
Many people who operate on chronic sleep debts end up napping during
the day or fighting through long periods of sleepiness in the afternoon.
Moreover, people who chronically fail to get enough sleep may actually
be cutting their lives short. A lack of sleep taxes the immune system,
and may even lead to disease and premature aging. To make all of
this worse, most people who are sleep deprived do not even realize
it. If you get sleepy during long meetings or long drives, chances
are you are chronically sleep deprived.
Significance
Estimates by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration indicate that drowsy or fatigued driving leads to more than 100,000 motor vehicle crashes per year. Even small disruptions in sleep can wreak havoc on human safety and performance. For example, in a nation-wide study of motor vehicle accidents occurring between 1986 and 1995, psychologist Stanley Coren (1998) studied the effects of the single hour of lost sleep that many Americans experience when they set their clocks forward every spring. The result? A 17% increase in traffic deaths on the Mondays following the time changes (compared with the Mondays before). Psychologists such as Gregory Hicks have observed similar findings. They focused specifically on alcohol-related traffic related fatalities and observed increases in the one-week window following changes to daylight savings time. It is harder to estimate the toll sleep deprivation takes on people's health, happiness, and productivity, but according to the National Sleep Foundation, the annual cost in lost worker productivity due to sleeplessness is about $18 billion dollars.
Practical Application
In light of the dramatic public health consequences of sleep deprivation and unhealthy sleep patterns, the National Sleep Foundation (NSF), in cooperation, with many partner organizations, established National Sleep Awareness Week, promoted each spring during the week when people set their clocks forward for daylight savings time. In 2003, the NSF reported that about 600 sleep centers in North America sponsored educational activities in their own local communities during National Sleep Awareness Week. Many U.S. states now educate drivers not only about the dangers of driving while intoxicated but also about the dangers of "driving while drowsy."
Cited Research and Additional Sources
Coren, S. (1996). Sleep thieves: An eye-opening exploration
into the science and mysteries of sleep. New York: Free Press.
Dement, W. C. (1999). The promise of sleep. New Yrok:
Delacorte Press.
Dinges, D. F., Pack, F., Williams, K., Gillen, K. A., Powell,
J. W., Ott, G. E., Aptowicz, C., & Pack, A. I. (1997). Cumulative
sleepiness, mood disturbance and psychomotor vigilance performance
decrements during a week of sleep restricted to 4-5 hours per night.
Sleep: Journal of Sleep Research & Sleep Medicine, Vol. 20,
pp. 267-277.
Dinges, D. F., Whitehouse, W. G., Orne, E. C., & Orne, M. T. (1988).
The benefits of a nap during prolonged work and wakefulness. Work
& Stress, Vol. 2, pp. 139-153.
Hicks, G. J., Davis, J. W., & Hicks, R. A. (1998). Fatal alcohol-related
traffic crashes increase subsequent to changes to and from daylight
savings time. Perceptual & Motor Skills, Vol. 86, pp. 879-882.
Jewett, M. E., Dijk, D-J., Kronauer, R. E., & Dinges, D. F. (1999).
Dose-response relationship between sleep duration and human psychomotor
vigilance and subjective alertness. Sleep: Journal of Sleep
Research & Sleep Medicine, Vol. 22, pp. 171-179.
Monk, T. H. (1991). Sleep, sleepiness and performance.
Oxford, England: John Wiley & Sons.
Moorcroft, W. H. (2003). Understanding sleep and dreaming.
New York: Kluwer/Plenum.
Spinweber, C. L., Johnson, L. C., & Chin, L. A. (1985). Disqualified
and qualified poor sleepers: Subjective and objective variables.
Health Psychology, Vol. 4, pp. 569-578.
Web Resource
National Sleep Foundation Web site:
http://www.sleepfoundation.org/default.cfm
Why sleep is important and what happens when you don't get enough (APA Public
Affairs brochure):
http://www.apa.org/pubinfo/sleep.html
American Psychological Association, May 12, 2004
For more on Health, click here.
For more on Safety, click here.
For more on Driving Safety, click here.
For more on Improving Human Performance, click here.
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