Ever feel like you don’t get enough sleep? You’re not alone. The National Institutes of Health recommends dedicating 7–8 of the 24 hours we are given in a day to sleep. Yet, in a 2013 survey, the National Sleep Foundation found that Americans are getting an average of six hours and 31 minutes of sleep on work nights. According to a Gallup poll from the same year, 40% of us get less than the recommended amount, down more than an hour from 1942. A lot has changed since the 1940s, but our need for sleep has not.
Where Did Our Sleep Go?
In today’s society, there’s increased pressure for us to be tuned in, turned on and plugged in. This translates to a slow drain on our sleep account, especially if we aren’t intentionally prioritizing rest. You may be sleep-deprived for a number of reasons, but here are a few of the most common ones:
- You’re lost without your screen time. Phones, tablets and other smart devices emit brain-activating lights, and, according to the NSF, more than 95% of Americans use some type of gadget within an hour of going to bed.
- You love a good buzz. There’s a craft beer, frothy cocktail and Starbucks on every corner — that’s great for enhanced sociability, but all that caffeine and alcohol isn’t doing much to help our sleep patterns.
- You’re all work and no rest. Work hard, play hard is a detrimental attitude that’s becoming widely accepted without an inclusion to rest hard. Americans are busier now than ever, working longer days, taking less vacation and retiring later. We are stressed, overworked and constantly comparing ourselves with others on social media and in the workplace. As a result, many of us would rather allocate free time to nonsleep activities.
Why Sleep Is Important
Sleep offers our bodies a chance to be restored and rejuvenated. And, this isn’t just beauty sleep we are talking about here. Most of our body’s major restorative functions — muscle growth, tissue repair, protein synthesis and growth hormone release — happens while we sleep. Sleep deprivation extends far beyond a little grogginess, too. It impairs judgment (leading to more accidents on the road and at work), affects our cognitive ability, kills our sex drive, ages our skin and worsens our memory. It also may cause weight gain and has been linked to depression.
The Sleep-Weight Connection
There’s a growing body of evidence that ties short sleep duration (getting less than 7–8 hours of shut-eye) with higher BMI’s in both adults and children. In 2015, researchers at Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar presented evidence that cutting sleep by as little as 30 minutes per day can lead to weight gain. The researchers studied 522 participants with newly diagnosed Type 2 diabetes for 12 months, asking them to track sleep seven days a week. After a year, the researchers found that, for every 30 minutes of sleep debt accrued at baseline, the risk of obesity and insulin resistance significantly increased, by 17% and 39%, respectively.
A 2012 University of Colorado study found that when participants weren’t getting enough sleep it affected their food choices and meal patterns. When participants skimped on sleep, they not only ate more food, but they also chose food that was lower in nutrients and higher in fat and carbohydrates. They also ate smaller breakfasts and had a greater tendency to snack after dinner.
Another study of just 30 participants published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition in 2011 found that sleep-deprived participants ate an average of 300 more calories per day, mostly in the form of saturated fats. But why? There’s a hormonal imbalance associated with sleep deprivation. Inadequate sleep impacts ghrelin and leptin, two hormones that regulate hunger and fullness. Ghrelin signals to your brain that it’s time to eat. The less you sleep, the more of this hormone your body tends to make. Leptin, on the other hand, signals to your brain that you’re full. Sleep deprivation actually causes production of leptin to drop, desensitizing your feeling of fullness. Tie the two together, and you’ve got one disastrous duo for weight control. But that’s not all: There’s a third hormone, cortisol, that may be involved as well. Cortisol is a stress hormone that signals the body to conserve energy (translation: store fat), and it spikes when we don’t get enough sleep. While the study sample size was small, the findings are still insightful given that the participants were observed under well-controlled conditions.
5 Tips to Improve Your Sleeping Habits
Sleep is undervalued. Getting enough quality sleep is holistically tied to your health and weight-loss goals. Here are five tips to help you not only get a better-quality dose of zzz’s but more of them, too:
- Turn your lights down an hour or so before bed. Light after sundown can delay your body’s natural clock from shifting into sleep mode. Darkness cues the release of melatonin, a hormone that will help you snooze.
- Reduce screen time at night. More screen time means more brain stimulation, which is not sleep-friendly.
- Get more exercise into your day. According to the NSF, adding even a few minutes of physical activity to your day makes a difference in your quality of sleep. This is supported by data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s 2005-2006 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, which found that 150 minutes of moderate activity a week showed a 65% improvement in sleep quality. People who worked out felt less drowsy during the day, too.
- Track your sleep. Use a pen-and-paper sleep diary, or invest in an activity monitor that records the number of sleep hours you get daily. After a few weeks, spot trends in your sleep pattern. Make it a priority to get at least seven hours of sleep daily, and track to keep yourself accountable. To spot more trends, record your alcohol and caffeine intake, exercise and any other factors that affect your slumber.
- Lay off the alcohol, caffeine and high-fat, high-protein foods too close to slumber. Keep alcohol and caffeine as far away from bedtime as possible. Alcohol may make you sleepy, but alcohol-induced sleep is also less restful. Additionally, your body isn’t designed to digest food while you’re asleep. Protein and fat take longer to break down (making them great for breakfast!) and will keep your system awake longer.
Is sleep the solution to our current obesity epidemic? Not likely. But it can possibly help individuals better manage their weight. Think of sleep as nutrition for your brain and body. Feed them well.
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