WBURSleeping In On Weekends May Not Make Up For Sleepless Weeks

BOSTON — Sleep is one of those things that most people want more of but never seem to get enough of. And that’s more than just frustrating. According to new research, a lack of sleep won’t only give you dark circles. It can also put you at risk for serious health problems.


New research shows that long-term sleep loss builds up over time and can cause health problems. California State Sen. Sam Aanestad yawns at the Capitol in Sacramento. (AP)

California state Sen. Sam Aanestad may be one of the many Americans who tries to cheat sleep by catching up on weekends. (AP)

How often do you try to cheat sleep?

Are you one of those people who gets just four or five hours a night during the week — and then tries to catch up by sleeping in on Saturdays and Sundays?

If you think that’s a healthy way to satisfy your sleeping needs, researchers say the body doesn’t actually work that way.

“Burning the candle at both ends really builds up a debt that can’t be repaid in simply one long night of sleep,” said Dr. Charles Czeisler, a sleep specialist at Harvard Medical School who co-authored a new study (PDF) that finds a difference between short-term and long-term sleep loss.

You can compensate for short-term sleep loss, Czeisler said, with just a few good nights of sleep. But long-term lack of sleep is harder to bounce back from — and can actually do lasting harm.

“People who haven’t been getting enough sleep on a regular basis,” Czeisler said, “are going to fall apart.”

As you become more and more sleep-deprived, you have a tougher time staying focused and maintaining your stamina. You also have slower reaction times. You may even start nodding off.

“Now, if you’re sitting in bed trying to read when that happens or watching TV, it’s not going to be a disaster — you’re just going to fall asleep,” Czeisler said.

“But if you’re driving a car, operating heavy equipment, or if you’re trying to take care of a patient, then that could result in catastrophic errors.”

Long-Term Health Consequences

It’s not just brain function that goes downhill.

Long-term lack of sleep can cause cardiovascular problems, weaken the immune system and change your metabolism in ways that result in diabetes or obesity.

Czeisler also says that if you regularly get a good night’s sleep, which for most people means about eight hours a night, you’ll be more efficient in everything you do — and you’ll feel a lot better, too.

You may not realize you suffer from chronic sleep loss because occasionally sleeping in gives you a false sense of recovery. Plus, the body’s internal clock usually gives us a second wind in late afternoon that helps us get through the day.

If you suspect you are chronically sleep-deprived, ask yourself why.

If you work two jobs or double shifts, that’s one thing. But Dr. Dan Cohen, a researcher at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and the study’s lead author, said there may be activities you could give up.

“People need to be honest with themselves and prioritize how much is staying up and watching The Late Show compared to getting an extra hour of sleep,” Cohen said. “Which one is more important?”

The Importance Of Napping

Cohen also said naps are good because they help chip away at long-term sleep loss. But if you simply can’t find the spare time to get more rest, it is not clear how long it takes to undo that damage.

“We know certainly that it takes longer than days, but whether it takes weeks of getting eight or more hours a night of sleep in a row to fully recover and restore the brain, we just don’t know,” Cohen said. “It’s probably longer than we’ve thought in the past.”

One more piece of bad news: Caffeine and sleeping pills only help counteract short-term sleep loss, not long-term tiredness.

If you’re chronically tired, Cohen recommends sneaking in a cat nap whenever you can.

WBUR Topics · Boston · Health
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  • Seema

    Sleep!

  • ms

    cat nap???? Yup- my employer will love that. Also- I’ll just tell the wife (a school teacher) when I get home from work at 6pm (who just picked up 2 kids from day care) that she’ll be cooking dinner for the kids, cleaning the kitchen and tending to the rest of the chores because I have to go take a cat nap…

    C’MON DOCTOR- GET REAL!

  • Christine

    This is important information that I will pass on to my kids, but unfortunately, unlike many, many other “advanced” nations, ours does not support healthy life styles. If you are lucky enough to have a job these days (no thanks to the pirates of Wall St. now enjoying yet higher bonuses), employers want “driven” employees (see ads in the employment section of your newspaper) who always put more and faster work first, before health and family. Sad

  • ellie

    I thought seven (7) hours of sleep is the ideal number of hours of sleep as
    discovered by reseachers studying habits of Centurians (the lucky peope who reach
    the ripe ol age of 100 years old!! They reported NOT 6 and NOT 8 but seven hours
    is the magic number. Is that
    not true anymore? also, cat naps are b
    great! ZZZzzzzzzzzz

  • Bamboo

    “Centurians”? I can just picture 100-year-old Roman soldiers participating in a survey. I know you meant “centenarians.” Sorry, I had to mention that. But thank you for the laugh. Dr. Czeisler’s advice does mirror what the recent studies have said about sleep, although the word on napping seems to change with every study published. I’m all for naps during my commute. To get 8 hours of sleep, one needs to go to sleep 8.5 hours before waking time, which is really hard to do. I am up at 5:30 AM and get home around 6 PM. Dinner, shower, homework? I’d have to go to sleep at 9PM to try to get 8 hours a night. It’s really difficult. The weekends become for sleeping, and I am very selfish with my time.

    Sweet dreams!

  • STUDENT

    中国初中和高中学生能有6小时的睡觉时间就很幸福了!!

  • Dotcom

    Ellie, here’s some food for thought – Part of the trouble studying centurian sleep habits is that they may be sleep only 7 as that perhaps was the “magic number” of hours to sleep during their time. It may have no true bearing on whether they live longer or not, but appear so, because that’s the number of hours people from that generation sleep. I will admit, though, that insomniacs are a lot more prone to health issues. Some of this may be tied into the cause of their condition (insomnia can be caused by some many things from Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome) as well as the insomnia itself (sleeping less than what your body needs gives it less time to repair itself and for your mind to rest which leaves one more vulnerable to diseases). The thing is how much a person *should* sleep really depends on the situation and the individual. We are all built differently and grow up and live in different environments. We also do different things to our body (ex – Joe Schmoe may smoke and spend his time in front of the TV, and Nancy Pancy may run 10 miles a day). So many things can impact how much sleep you need and how regularly it’s got to happen. There’s a lot of misunderstandings as it is from sleep studies—especially for children (I’ve discovered this as a parent). It depends on the scientists’ bias and some studies need to be thrown out due to inaccuracy and their very small numbers. 

  • Dotcom

    It’s not a matter of how much anymore, but the quality of sleep you get. If you aren’t getting enough REM, your body will not be able to repair itself no matter whether you sleep 15 minutes or 10 hours at a time. Many things have a huge impact on this from caffeine to whether or not a person gets exercise. In fact, I have begone to people a lot of people wouldn’t need to be on anti-depressent/anti-anxiety medicine if they stopped caffeine/aspartame consumption and got moderate exercise. A big part of this is because these things have such a HUGE impact on sleep quality. The problem is most people pick something to do that’s a chore and thus they have no motivation to stick with it as the results of exercise are very slow when it comes to appearance (particularly in women—our bodies like to hang onto weight when we first start working out—it’s a survival mechanism for having babies). You got to find something you love to do and that does more for you than just makes you “fit.” Then you have to keep making short-term goals with it to keep it challenging. You do that and make the simple goal of sticking with it for a year (even if you have bad weeks due to injury or illness), I promise you that a lot of your sleep and mental problems will take a hike. “Just keep swimming!”

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