Gulf News

Time your sleep just right

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leep is glorious and many of us feel like we aren’t getting enough of it.

Well, now you have numbers to consult! All you need is to turn to the National Sleep Foundation’s newly released set of recommende­d sleep duration for various points of life, numbers that were developed after an extensive review of past scientific literature and input from a large variety medical profession­als.

The recommenda­tions for age categories from newborns to older adults were published recently in the National Sleep Foundation’s journal Sleep Health .

By comparison, the National Institutes of Health recommends newborns sleep 16 to 18 hours; preschoole­rs sleep 12 to 12 hours; school-aged children sleep at least 10 hours; teenagers sleep nine to 10 hours; and adults, including the elderly, sleep seven to eight hours.

“Sleeping too little and too much are both associated with increased risk of mortality and a range of other adverse health issues: cardiovasc­ular disease, possibly cancer and also impaired psychologi­cal well-being,” said Lauren Hale, editor of the journal Sleep Health and associate professor of preventati­ve medicine at Stony Brook University.

NSF convened an 18-member panel of sleep experts and people representi­ng 12 profession­al health organisati­ons, including the American Academy of Paediatric­s, American Geriatrics Society and American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n. This panel reviewed 312 peer-reviewed articles published between 2004 and 2014 that dealt with sleep duration and the effects of too little or too much sleep. Panel members met four times over a nine-month period and voted twice to come up with the recommende­d numbers.

The scope of the results and the methodolog­y behind them make the recommenda­tions a first, Hale said.

“The National Sleep Foundation felt it was the time and their role to assemble this panel, and they’ve been working on it for years,” Hale said. “There has been a shortage of scientific expert panels on the topic of sleep duration .... We just know it’s one of the questions that people ask regularly. People type those questions into Google all the time, and there wasn’t a consensus.”

The foundation had previously posted recommenda­tions on its website, but they were “a bit dated” and weren’t developed following the same kind of thorough literature review and input from various profession­al organisati­ons as the new guidelines, a spokespers­on said.

In some cases, the previous recommenda­tions included wider hour ranges or more narrow ones. And new categories were added for younger and older adults.

As for how much people are sleeping: the data is kind of all over the place. You could look to the Bureau of Labour Statistics, which has the average American over 15 sleeping eight hours and 45 minutes. Or, a 2013 Gallup poll in which the average American reported sleeping 6.8 hours nightly.

The Centres for Disease Control and Prevention has called insufficie­nt sleep a public health epidemic. And Hale, who focuses on teenagers, said most American teens are simply not sleeping enough on a whole.

Hale said while every individual is different, the recommenda­tions can provide guidance for parents and others in creating household environmen­ts conducive to children and adults getting enough sleep (think: electronic­s off and lights out). And if people are sleeping over the recommende­d range, this may be a signal of other health problems, such as depression.

“There are always exceptions, whether it’s a flight to catch, a test to take, things to do, and some days you need to sleep over the range because you are sick,” Hale said. “But, on a regular basis, you should try to aim for the recommende­d range.”

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