Daily Mirror

Sufficient sleep is the basis for good health

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When I was in my 50s I was a director of a multinatio­nal US corporatio­n and had to fly to San Francisco for board meetings each month.

With often a nine-hour time change I found the jet lag very difficult to deal with, having to eat in the middle of the night and attend meetings when I should have been asleep.

Very often I couldn’t get my brain to shut off and lay sleepless as I got shorter and shorter of sleep. I could manage to keep going in California but it would take me a week to recover my sleep debt back home and I would inevitably go down with a cold.

I didn’t understand my susceptibi­lity to colds then, but now I do.

It turns out just one night of only four or five hours’ sleep and your natural killer cells, the ones that attack cancer cells which your body generates all the time, fall by more than two thirds. The upshot is the shorter your sleep, the shorter your life.

Sleep gives us an all-round chance

of good health and long life, whereas lack of it does the opposite. People aged 45 years or older who sleep less than six hours a night are twice as likely to have a heart attack or stroke in their lifetime compared to those getting seven or eight hours a night. A lack of sleep causes you to become less responsive to insulin and lose control of blood sugar, (prediabete­s). So insufficie­nt sleep makes you susceptibl­e to putting on weight.

One of the reasons for this is that inadequate sleep lowers levels of the satiety-signalling hormone leptin, and increases levels of the hungersign­alling hormone ghrelin.

Sleep is essential for a fully functionin­g immune system. Your body can literally sleep itself well. And the opposite pertains. Lose sleep even for a single night, and your resilience plummets. And as rogue proteins are cleared from your brain during sleep, too little sleep over the years will raise your risk of Alzheimer’s disease.

Alzheimer’s and its relation to poor sleep is an interestin­g one. In daily life toxic proteins (amyloid, tau) accumulate in the brain, killing brain cells. During deep sleep these proteins are cleaned out from the brain.

Loss of deep sleep lessens our ability to remove them.

Sleep is also essential to mental wellbeing. Deep sleep, REM sleep, the time when we dream, is healing.

Sleep, or a lack of it, also affects our mood more generally. Brain scans show the key spot for triggering anger and rage is aroused by sleep deprivatio­n.

Just one bad night and your killer cells fall

Child poverty in Scotland is projected to hit a 20-year high in the next few years, despite ambitious Scottish government targets. Welfare policies introduced in 2015 by the UK government are blamed for the projected increase.

These include a four-year freeze on benefits and a two-child limit on support. The UK government then abandoned its statutory commitment to eradicate child poverty by 2020.

The Scottish parliament took a different approach when it unanimousl­y approved the Child Poverty (Scotland) Act in 2017. It’s a commitment to reducing child poverty to below 18% by 2023-24.

However due to a lack of funds the latest figures, for 2016-17, show that 23% of children (230,000) across Scotland are living in poverty. This is significan­tly lower than the overall UK rate of 30%. The projection is that child poverty will increase to 29% in Scotland by 2023-24.

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