Do You Really Need 8 Hours of Sleep Every Night? | Body Stuff with Dr. Jen Gunter | TED

3,224,757 views ・ 2022-11-02

TED


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Sleep is so important.
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We need it to live.
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And when we can't sleep, we're desperate for help.
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[Body Stuff with Dr. Jen Gunter]
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But lately, our fascination with sleep feels as if it's taken on an urgency.
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Do a quick internet search for sleep and you'll find a slew of articles
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about how to make your sleep perfect.
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New gadgets, fancy alarm clocks,
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stay away from blue light.
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There are lots of services, products and advice columns
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that tell us we're sleeping wrong.
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Not enough,
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not quality sleep, wrong position.
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Even worse, you might find scary messaging
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claiming that if you're not sleeping right
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your life is going to be shorter,
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you're going to get all kinds of diseases.
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One of the biggest worries we have about our sleep
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is that we're not getting enough
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and that anything less than seven hours a night
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means that we’re doomed to bad health,
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everything from high blood pressure to Alzheimer’s disease.
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But there are two flaws with this kind of messaging.
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The first flaw is that it's not completely accurate.
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Seven to eight hours of sleep,
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while recommended for adults, is just an average.
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And while messages have to be simplified for health communication to the public,
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sometimes important nuances get lost.
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So yes, it's true that not getting enough sleep in the long term
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is associated with health problems like cardiovascular disease,
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diabetes and depression.
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But fixating solely on seven to eight hours
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ignores the fact that there's a range of sleep that people need.
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The duration of a good night's sleep can be different for different people.
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Some adults need eight, but some are just fine on six.
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The second flaw with this kind of doomsday messaging
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is that it can be counterproductive,
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especially for people who do have trouble sleeping.
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For instance, in 2019,
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it was estimated that 21 percent of adults in the US
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were wearing sleep tracking devices.
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And that number is probably growing.
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And I get it.
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It's fascinating to see how much sleep you've gotten each night
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and to know what part of your night was spent in deep sleep or dreaming.
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But having all of that sleep data
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is causing some people to become obsessed with it,
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so much so that it’s leading to a condition some call orthosomnia:
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a preoccupation with the constant need to achieve perfect sleep.
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And this condition, ironically, is causing more sleep problems.
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Now orthosomnia might be an extreme example,
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but the anxiety of not getting enough sleep
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is keeping some of us up at night.
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So here's what some experts are saying.
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Stop fixating on the number
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because that can lead to unrealistic expectations of sleep.
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According to Dr. Colleen Carney,
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a psychologist and the head of the Ryerson University Sleep Lab,
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the basic questions you should ask yourself are:
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Do I feel reasonably well-rested during the day?
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Do I generally sleep through the night without disturbances?
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Or, if I wake, do I fall back asleep easily?
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Can I stay awake through the day without involuntarily falling asleep?
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If your answers are yes to all three,
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you probably don't need to worry about your sleep.
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And if you're struggling with your sleep,
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instead of buying expensive blue light filters
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or fancy sleep trackers,
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try talking with your doctor to make sure there aren't any medical conditions
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that need to be explored first.
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Then try evidence-based recommendations
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laid out by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine.
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What's really cool is that there's a highly effective therapy
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called cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia, or CBT-I,
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It doesn’t have any medications involved.
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And it has a really low failure rate.
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