The Star Malaysia

Do Americans get enough sleep?

Not according to a new Gallup poll, with majority now saying they lack rest

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NEW YORK: If you’re feeling – YAWN – sleepy or tired while you read this and wish you could get some more shut-eye, you’re not alone. A majority of Americans say they would feel better if they could have more sleep, according to a new poll.

But in the United States. the ethos of grinding and pulling yourself up by your own bootstraps is ubiquitous, both in the country’s beginnings and our current environmen­t of always-on technology and work hours. And getting enough sleep can seem like a dream.

The Gallup poll, released Monday, found 57% of Americans say they would feel better if they could get more sleep, while only 42% say they are getting as much sleep as they need. That’s a first in Gallup polling since 2001; in 2013, when Americans were last asked, it was just about the reverse - 56% saying they got the needed sleep and 43% saying they didn’t.

Younger women, under the age of 50, were especially likely to report they aren’t getting enough rest.

The poll also asked respondent­s to report how many hours of sleep they usually get per night: Only 26% said they got eight or more hours, which is around the amount that sleep experts say is recommende­d for health and mental well-being. Just over half, 53%, reported getting six to seven hours. And 20% said they got five hours or less, a jump from the 14% who reported getting the least amount of sleep in 2013.

The poll doesn’t get into reasons WHY Americans aren’t getting

the sleep they need, and since Gallup last asked the question in 2013, there’s no data breaking down the particular impact of the last four years and the pandemic era.

But what’s notable, says Sarah Fioroni, senior researcher at Gallup, is the shift in the last decade toward more Americans thinking they would benefit from more sleep and particular­ly the jump in the number of those saying they get five or less hours.

“That five hours or less category ... was almost not really heard of in 1942,” Fioroni said. “There’s almost nobody that said they slept five hours or less.”

In modern American life, there also has been “this pervasive belief about how sleep was unnecessar­y – that it was this period of inactivity where little to nothing was actually happening and that took up time that could have been better used,” said Joseph Dzierzewsk­i, vice president for research and scientific affairs at

the National Sleep Foundation.

It’s only relatively recently that the importance of sleep to physical, mental and emotional health has started to percolate more in the general population, he said.

And there’s still a long way to go. For some Americans, like Justine Broughal, 31, a self-employed event planner with two small children, there simply aren’t enough hours in the day. So even though she recognises the importance of sleep, it often comes in below other priorities like her 4-month-old son, who still wakes up throughout the night, or her 3-year-old daughter.

“I really treasure being able to spend time with (my children),” Broughal says. “Part of the benefit of being self-employed is that I get a more flexible schedule, but it’s definitely often at the expense of my own care.”

So why are we awake all the time? One likely reason for Americans’ sleeplessn­ess is cultural – a longstandi­ng emphasis on industriou­sness and productivi­ty.

Some of the context is much older than the shift documented in the poll. It includes the Protestant­s from European countries who colonised the country, said Claude Fischer, a professor of sociology at the graduate school of the University of California Berkeley.

Their belief system included the idea that working hard and being rewarded with success was evidence of divine favour.

“It has been a core part of American culture for centuries,” he said. “You could make the argument that it ... in the secularise­d form over the centuries becomes just a general principle that the morally correct person is somebody who doesn’t waste their time.”

Jennifer Sherman has seen that in action. In her research in rural American communitie­s over the years, the sociology professor at Washington State University says a common theme among people she interviewe­d was the importance of having a solid work ethic. That applied not only to paid labor but unpaid labor as well, like making sure the house was clean.

A through line of American cultural mythology is the idea of being “individual­ly responsibl­e for creating our own destinies,” she said.

“And that does suggest that if you’re wasting too much of your time ... that you are responsibl­e for your own failure.”

“The other side of the coin is a massive amount of disdain for people considered lazy,” she added.

Broughal says she thinks that as parents, her generation is able to let go of some of those expectatio­ns. “I prioritise ... spending time with my kids, over keeping my house pristine,” she said.

But with two little ones to care for, she said, making peace with a messier house doesn’t mean more time to rest: “We’re spending family time until my 3-year-old goes to bed at eight and then we’re resetting the house, right?”

While the poll only shows a broad shift over the past decade, living through the Covid-19 pandemic may have affected people’s sleep patterns. Also discussed in post-pandemic life is “revenge bedtime procrastin­ation,” in which people put off sleeping and instead scroll on social media or binge a show as a way of trying to handle stress.

Liz Meshel is familiar with that. On the nights when her work schedule stretches to 10pm, the 30-year-old American finds herself in a “revenge procrastin­ation” cycle. She wants some time to herself to decompress before going to sleep and ends up sacrificin­g sleeping hours to make it happen.

“That’s applies to bedtime as well, where I’m like, ’Well, I didn’t have any me time during the day, and it is now 10pm, so I am going to feel totally fine and justified watching X number of episodes of TV, spending this much time on Instagram, as my way to decompress,” she said. “Which obviously will always make the problem worse.”

 ?? — AP ?? Stealing some zzzs: a traveller taking a nap as he waits for a ride outside Miami internatio­nal airport in Florida, United States.
— AP Stealing some zzzs: a traveller taking a nap as he waits for a ride outside Miami internatio­nal airport in Florida, United States.
 ?? — AP ?? Weary student: a graduating senior taking a nap at Hinsdale Middle High School in New Hampshire, United States.
— AP Weary student: a graduating senior taking a nap at Hinsdale Middle High School in New Hampshire, United States.

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