The
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released a report revealing that about one-third of
adults in the US appear to be getting insufficient sleep.
After
surveying 444,306 US adults in 2014, CDC found that while two-thirds of white
people nationally got enough sleep, only about half of blacks, Native Hawaiians
and Pacific Islanders did.
Among the respondents, 11.8% reported a
sleep duration of 5 hours or less, 23.0% reported 6 hours, 29.5% reported 7
hours, 27.7% reported 8 hours, 4.4% reported 9 hours, and 3.6% reported 10
hours or more.
Overall, 65.2% reported the recommended
healthy sleep duration of 7 hours. The
age-specific prevalence of sleeping ≥7 hours was highest among respondents aged
≥65 years (73.7%). The prevalence of
healthy sleep duration was highest among respondents with a college degree or
higher (71.5%). The prevalence was higher among married respondents (67.4%)
compared with those who were divorced, widowed, or separated (55.7%), or never
married (62.3%).
Healthy
sleep duration ranged from 71.6% in South Dakota, which has the largest
proportion of residents who get at least seven hours of sleep each night, to
56.1% of Hawaii that has the lowest proportion. A lower
prevalence of healthy sleep duration was observed in the southeastern United
States and in states along the Appalachian Mountains.
CDC’s
report states that sleeping less than seven hours per night is associated with
increased risk for obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure, coronary heart
disease, stroke, frequent mental distress, and all-cause mortality.
As more than
one third of U.S. respondents, or approximately 84 million U.S adults reported
sleeping less than 7 hours in a 24-hour period.
The need for public awareness and public education about sleep health is
urgently needed. In addition worksite
shift policies that ensure healthy sleep duration for shift workers,
particularly medical professionals, emergency response personnel, and transportation
industry personnel should be implemented.
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Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Insufficient sleep common among US adults
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