The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Poor sleep can lead to health problems

- DR. W. GIFFORD-JONES DIANA GIFFORD-JONES contact-us@docgiff.com @Peiguardia­n

An old Irish proverb says, “A good laugh and a long sleep are the best cures in the doctor’s book.”

But research suggests it would be wiser to think of good sleep as an ingredient of wellbeing – a starting point for health, not a fixer-upper.

Sleep is an essential building block of good health, along with quality nutrition, moderate exercise, socioecono­mic connectivi­ty, mindfulnes­s and ample good luck.

Guidelines recommend “7 to 9 hours of good-quality sleep for adults aged 18 to 64, on a regular basis, with consistent sleep and wake times for health benefits.” For adults aged 65 and older, a slightly modified “7 to 8 hours of sleep” is advised.

But sleep is too often neglected – insufficie­nt in both quantity and quality.

According to a global sleep survey, 62 per cent of adults worldwide feel they don’t sleep well when they go to bed. Surveys show that North Americans, on average, sleep just under seven hours a night. Some are getting more – and good for them. Some are getting less – with serious consequenc­es.

Poor quality sleep has harmful implicatio­ns for insomniacs. The U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute reports, “Sleep deficiency is linked to many chronic health problems, including heart disease, kidney disease, high blood pressure, diabetes, stroke, obesity and depression.”

But drowsy people have negative implicatio­ns for other people too. Lack of sleep is a major factor in deadly car accidents and other transporta­tion tragedies. Both the Chernobyl nuclear plant disaster and the Exxon Valdez oil spill involved workers affected by sleep deprivatio­n.

Although people commonly try to “catch up” on sleep during the weekend, studies have found this to be a losing strategy. For one thing, less weekday sleep equates to later nights, awake and snacking, which leads to weight gain and involves challenges in managing diabetes, for example.

It may be disappoint­ing to learn more bad news. Research now shows that even long periods of sufficient sleep don’t make up for sleep deficits. Not getting good sleep? The damage is done.

Scientists are starting to unpack exactly what kind of problems develop from lack of good sleep. One study founds that consistent­ly losing an hour and a half of sleep a night can increase the risk of inflammato­ry disorders and cardiovasc­ular disease. The study, published in the Journal of Experiment­al Medicine, showed that sleep disruption­s in both humans and mice led to the same loss in the protective effects of their immune systems “actually making infections worse”. In effect, poor sleep causes trouble in blood cell production, leading to overproduc­tion of white blood cells that normally fight infections, but the overabunda­nce instead results in inflammati­on.

Another study involving more than 7,000 men and women at the ages of 50, 60 and 70, found that people at age 50 getting five hours of sleep or less were “20 per cent more likely to have been diagnosed with a chronic disease and 40 per cent more likely to be diagnosed with two or more chronic diseases over 25 years, compared to people who slept for up to seven hours.”

Those are big difference­s! Those two more hours of sleep gives the body enough time to complete one full sleep cycle, allowing brain and body to recuperate and immune systems to function effectivel­y.

What are some tips for healthy sleep? Get natural daylight exposure. Limit alcohol before bed. Eliminate noise and light disruption­s. And at bedtime, allow into the mind those things that sooth the soul. These days, that means turning off the evening news and turning instead to a good book.

But sleep is too often neglected – insufficie­nt in both quantity and quality.

The weekly column by W. Gifford-jones, MD has been published for 45 years. The same no-nonsense tradition now continues in a fatherdaug­hter collaborat­ion as his daughter, Diana Gifford-jones, joins him to co-write Common Sense Health. Sign-up at www.docgiff.com to receive a weekly e-newsletter. For comments, contact-us@docgiff.com.

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