The New Zealand Herald

Coffee and tea stop me sleeping — well, maybe not

New study appears to shatter the myth around caffeine

- Sarah Knapton

Caffeine is a known powerful stimulant that perks up drinkers, increases alertness and promotes wakefulnes­s. Yet a surprising new study has found drinking tea or coffee within four hours of bedtime does not affect sleep at all.

Researcher­s from Florida Atlantic University and Harvard Medical School recorded how much caffeine, alcohol and nicotine 785 volunteers consumed and compared their sleep diaries and wrist sensors.

Around 40 per cent of the group admitted consuming caffeine on at least one night of the study. But although nicotine and alcohol did disrupt sleep — with a night-time cigarette knocking 42 minutes off total sleep for insomniacs — caffeine appeared to have no effect.

The findings were unexpected, as physiologi­cally, caffeine blocks sleeppromo­ting chemicals in the brain.

Writing in the journal Sleep , Dr Christine Spadola, of the Florida university, said: “Considerin­g the public health importance of obtaining quality sleep and the widespread use of alcohol, nicotine, and caffeine, relatively few studies have thoroughly investigat­ed the associatio­n between evening substance use and sleep

parameters. This study represents one of the largest longitudin­al examinatio­ns of the associatio­ns of evening use of alcohol, caffeine and nicotine with objectivel­y measured sleep outcomes.”

A night with use of nicotine and/ or alcohol within four hours of bedtime demonstrat­ed worse sleep continuity than a night without.

“We did not observe an associatio­n between ingestion of caffeine within four hours of bed with any of the sleep parameters. These findings support the importance of sleep health recommenda­tions which promote the restrictio­n of evening nicotine and alcohol.” A report by the Sleep Council found 70 per cent of adults in Britain get under seven hours’ sleep a night and more than a quarter regularly sleep poorly.

The NHS recommends cutting down on tea, coffee, energy drinks or cola in the evening because caffeine is thought to interfere with the process of falling asleep and prevents deep sleep, recommendi­ng instead warm milky drinks or herbal teas.

The advice is based on previous research that showed caffeine use close to bedtime appeared to increase the time it took to fall asleep and made people wake sooner.

But the researcher­s say most studies involved fewer participan­ts in unnatural laboratory settings, where they were given caffeine tablets to mimic the effects of night-time drinks. In contrast, the people in the new study went about their normal lives.

 ??  ?? Drinking tea or coffee within four hours of bedtime does not affect sleep at all according to new research.
Drinking tea or coffee within four hours of bedtime does not affect sleep at all according to new research.

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