Many of us have been wondering how to sleep for longer and it’s little wonder. Nowadays, there are lots of distractions and stressors, from work to relationships, family to finances, making it difficult to get a quality night's sleep.
In the first instance, it can help to pin down just why you can’t sleep for as long as you would like. Is it your bed or your bedroom set-up? Perhaps it’s your age or your diet? Or maybe it’s anxiety or stress, in which case the best magnesium supplement could help you to wind down. It might even be a more serious sleep disorder like sleep apnoea, requiring specialist intervention. If you can put your finger on what is causing your restless nights, you can soon master how to sleep for longer.
Here, we'll look at how much sleep we need — and what you can do to get a better night's rest.
The amount of sleep you need is dictated by your circadian rhythm. It’s the 24-hour body clock that helps to regulate a wide range of your body’s functions, from appetite to blood pressure to your temperature and, crucially, the sleep you require. But while some people, like, for example, former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, can survive on as little as four hours sleep a night, most of us require a lot more, according to the BBC.
But it’s not straightforward, as Kirstie Anderson, Consultant Neurologist and founder of the sleep improvement program Sleepstation explained to Live Science. "How much sleep humans need is a little like asking someone their shoe size – it changes as you grow and it’s different for everyone," she said.
Teenagers, for example, will typically need an average of eight-10 hours a night while those under 50 will normally get by on seven to eight. Over-50s, meanwhile, should find six to seven hours sufficient while the over 65s will tend to wake much earlier than younger people, as an increased likelihood of sleep disorders and other age-related medical issues begin to interrupt their sleep, according to the Canadian Medical Association Journal. Indeed, as we age the human body clock edges backward, meaning we tend to wake up around half an hour earlier for each decade we have lived.
But while the amount of sleep you need changes as you age, measuring it in terms of hours gained is not the best method of assessing your sleep needs, as Anderson explained. "The most useful way to rate sleep is to ask yourself whether you feel refreshed on waking and whether you fall asleep within 20 to 30 minutes on most nights of the week," she said. "If you do feel refreshed, and then get through the day without napping, then your sleep is likely to be right for you."
If it isn’t, however, then you may be suffering from what is called ‘sleep debt’, where not getting sufficient quality sleep results in a deficit. Research from the CDC has shown that sleep debt can not only lead to chronic fatigue and reduced productivity but also to mood swings and anxiety. It also highlights not just how important getting enough sleep is but also the impact of what can happen if you don’t.
Conversely, having too much sleep can also be detrimental, as Samantha Briscoe, Lead Clinical Physiologist for the London Bridge Sleep Centre at London Bridge Hospital told Live Science. "Sleeping for longer is not necessarily beneficial and sleeping for longer than our body needs can have adverse effects," she said.
"It’s important to listen to our bodies to determine how much sleep we need. For optimum sleep quality consistency is the key."
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