Tag Archives: sleeping

Lizzo talks buying lavish home after sleeping in her car 10 years ago: ‘Milestone for me’

Lizzo talks buying lavish home after sleeping in her car 10 years ago: ‘Milestone for me’

Lizzo started from the bottom and now she’s here buying a luxurious home for herself.

In a preview of her upcoming Christmas Day interview on CBS Sunday Morning, the three-time Grammy winner got emotional talking to host Tracy Smith about her journey that led up to this moment.

The Be Loved crooner shared why this particular “milestone” is so meaningful to her. The singer divulged all she endured before reportedly rolled out $15 million to buy Harry Styles’ posh Beverly Hills home, via Entertainment Weekly.

“Just 10 years ago, you were sleeping in your car,” the host began the interview in the singer’s home.

“Yeah, yeah,” Lizzo said. “And, like, whoo!, staying in, like, people’s rooms and sleeping on their couches. And now, on this past tour, which I was blessed to, you know, stay in really nice places, but I was like, ‘I miss my house. Like, I can’t wait to come back to my own home and to my bed.’ And I was like, ‘This is the first time I’ve ever said this.’ It’s like a milestone for me.”

Lizzo accepted her first-ever Emmy award earlier this year. Moreover, the About Damn Time hitmaker also debuted as an official couple with Myke Wright on the red carpet at a screening for her Emmy-winning reality series, Lizzo’s Watch Out for the Big Grrrls, via ET

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Trouble Sleeping? You Could Be at Risk of Type 2 Diabetes

Summary: Those who report trouble sleeping are at increased risk of poor cardiometabolic health problems which can lead to type 2 diabetes.

Source: University of South Australia

As the Christmas season starts to ramp up, University of South Australia researchers are reminding people to prioritise a good night’s sleep as new research shows that a troubled sleep may be associated with risk factors for type 2 diabetes.

In the first study of its kind, researchers found that people who reported trouble sleeping were on average more likely to have indicators of poor cardiometabolic health – inflammatory markers, cholesterol and body weight – which can contribute to type 2 diabetes.

In Australia, almost one million adults have type 2 diabetes. Globally, type 2 diabetes affects more than 422 million people.

UniSA researcher Dr Lisa Matricciani says different aspects of sleep are associated with risk factors for diabetes.

“Everyone knows that sleep is important. But when we think about sleep, we mainly focus on how many hours of sleep we get, when we should also be looking at our sleep experience as a whole,” Dr Matricciani says.

In the first study of its kind, researchers found that people who reported trouble sleeping were on average more likely to have indicators of poor cardiometabolic health – inflammatory markers, cholesterol and body weight – which can contribute to type 2 diabetes. Image is in the public domain

“How soundly we sleep, when we go to bed and get up, and how regular our sleep habits are, may be just as important as sleep duration.”

“In this study, we examined the association of different aspects of sleep, and risk factors for diabetes, and found a connection between those who had troubled sleep and those who were at risk of type 2 diabetes.”

The study assessed more than 1000 Australian adults* with a median age of 44.8 years. Researchers examined a range of sleep characteristics: self-report trouble sleeping, duration, timing, efficiency, and day-to-day sleep length variability.

“People who reported having trouble sleeping were also more likely to have a higher body mass index, as well as blood markers of cholesterol and inflammation,” Dr Matricciani says.

“When it comes down to the crunch, we know we must prioritise our sleep to help stay in good health. More research is needed, but as this study shows, it’s important to think about sleep as a whole, not just as one aspect.”

About this sleep and diabetes research news

Author: Annabel Mansfield
Source: University of South Australia
Contact: Annabel Mansfield – University of South Australia
Image: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Closed access.
“Multidimensional Sleep and Cardiometabolic Risk Factors for Type 2 Diabetes: Examining Self-Report and Objective Dimensions of Sleep” by Lisa Matricciani et al. Science of Diabetes Self-Management and Care

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Abstract

Multidimensional Sleep and Cardiometabolic Risk Factors for Type 2 Diabetes: Examining Self-Report and Objective Dimensions of Sleep

Purpose:

The purpose of the study was to determine the association between objective and self-report measures of sleep and cardiometabolic risk factors for type 2 diabetes.

Methods:

This study examines data on Australian adults, collected as part of the Child Health CheckPoint study. Sleep was examined in terms of actigraphy-derived sleep duration, timing, efficiency and variability; and self-report trouble sleeping. Cardiometabolic risk factors for type 2 diabetes were examined in terms of body mass index and biomarkers of inflammation and dyslipidemia. Generalized estimating equations, adjusted for geographic clustering, were used to determine the association between measures of sleep and cardiometabolic risk factors.

Results:

Complete case analysis was conducted for 1017 parents (87% mothers). Both objective and self-report measures of sleep were significantly but weakly associated with cardiometabolic risk factors.

Conclusion:

Both objective and self-report measures of sleep are significantly associated with cardiometabolic risk factors for type 2 diabetes. Self-report troubled sleep is associated with poorer cardiometabolic health, independent of actigraphy-derived sleep parameters.

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Sleepyheads need these 3 habits to get rid of grogginess: study

Always wake up feeling groggy? There’s a solution to that.

Scientists believe they found a foolproof three-step formula to turn sluggishness into a refreshed morning feeling.

Though it’s only three factors, some might find it a little difficult, considering it involves exercise and avoiding sugar.

Researchers at the University of California believe the key to feeling renewed in the morning is a combination of strenuous exercise, seven to nine hours of sleep and a high-carb and low-sugar breakfast.

“We know there are people who always seem to be bright-eyed and busy-tailed when they first wake up,” author Professor Matthew Walker said. “But if you think you’re not like that, you tend to think, ‘Well I guess it’s just my genetic fate that I’m slow to wake up. There’s really nothing I can do about it,’ short of using stimulant chemical caffeine, which can harm sleep.

“But our findings offer a different and more optimistic message,” he continued.

The formula published in the journal Nature Communications was put together after analyzing hundreds of people.

While the research showed that strenuous exercise helped sleepyheads, the scientists couldn’t point out exactly why — but noted that it does wear a person out and is a known mood-booster.
Getty Images

While the research showed that strenuous exercise helped sleepyheads, the scientists couldn’t point out exactly why — but noted that it does wear a person out and is a known mood booster.

“It is well known that physical activity, in general, improves your alertness and also your mood level,” Dr. Raphael Vallat, study co-author and postdoctoral fellow, said.

The researchers found a high correlation between mood and levels of alertness, with those who were, on average, happier also were more alert.

“It may be that exercise-induced better sleep is part of the reason exercise the day before, by helping sleep that night, leads to superior alertness throughout the next day,” Vallat said.

While seven to nine hours of sleep is ideal, even just a little more can help. A lie-in — remaining in bed after waking up — can also help fight off that hazy feeling, according to Walker.

The recommended amount of sleep, and particularly good quality sleep, can rid the body of “sleep inertia” — impaired cognitive and sensory-motor performance after waking up. Getting enough sleep also helps clear the body of a chemical called adenosine, which makes us feel tired and builds up throughout the day.

A high-carb, low-sugar breakfast was discovered as the best meal to wake up feeling lively. 
Getty Images

Sleeping in later can also help with alertness.

“Considering that the majority of individuals in society are not getting enough sleep during the week, sleeping longer on a given day can help clear some of the adenosine sleepiness debt they are carrying,” Walker said.

Participants were also given different meals for breakfast, kept food diaries for two weeks, and wore watches to record physical activity, sleep quantity, quality, timing and regularity. They also self-recorded their levels of alertness from the moment they woke up and throughout the day,

All pre-prepared breakfasts were centered around a muffin and packaged with different nutrients. Some had just a muffin while others were paired with items such as chocolate milk, a protein shake or fiber bars. Some were also given a dose of glucose.

Participants were asked to fast for eight hours prior to eating breakfast and for three to four hours post-meal. They also wore a glucose monitor.

The researchers wanted to test the breakdown of breakfast meals high in sugar, protein and carbohydrates. A high-carb, low-sugar breakfast was discovered as the best meal to wake up feeling lively. 

Breakfasts with a lot of sugar left participants feeling the worst since it can spike your blood sugar levels, negatively impacting the brain’s ability to return to waking consciousness.

“A breakfast rich in carbs can increase alertness, so long as your body is healthy and capable of efficiently disposing of the glucose from that meal, preventing a sustained spike in blood sugar that otherwise blunts your brain’s alertness,” Dr. Vallat said.

While most people assume feeling sleepy in the morning is nothing more than an annoying part of our lives, Walker shared that it actually “costs developed nations billions of dollars every year through loss of productivity, increased health care utilization, work absenteeism.”

He also said that grogginess in the morning can be deadly, resulting in car crashes and work-related incidents.

“As scientists, we must understand how to help society wake up better and help reduce the mortal cost to society’s current struggle to wake up effectively each day,” Walker said.

“How you wake up each day is very much under your own control, based on how you structure your life and your sleep.”

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UVA shooting suspect shot one victim while he was sleeping, appeared to be “aiming at certain people,” prosecutor says

A witness who saw a University of Virginia student open fire on a bus returning from a field trip described to police how the gunman targeted specific victims — many of them football players — shooting one of them as he slept, a prosecutor said in court Wednesday. The details emerged during the suspect’s first court appearance.

Albemarle County Commonwealth’s Attorney James Hingeley said a witness who was shown a photo of the shooting suspect, Christopher Darnell Jones Jr., identified him as the gunman. The violence Sunday night left three football players dead and one player and another student wounded.

The suspect, a former football player, appeared by video link from a local jail for Wednesday’s court hearing. He did not enter a plea to the numerous charges he faces and said he plans to hire an attorney. A judge ordered him held without bond and appointed a public defender to represent him until he secures private counsel.

University officials and police have said the 22-year-old suspect joined a group of about two dozen others on a field trip Sunday from the Charlottesville campus to see a play in the nation’s capital, about 120 miles away. When their bus arrived back on campus, authorities have said the suspect opened fire, killing Lavel Davis Jr., D’Sean Perry and Devin Chandler.

From left, college football players Devin Chandler, Lavel Davis Jr. and D’Sean Perry are seen in a combination photo of undated images provided by University of Virginia Athletics.

University of Virginia Athletics via AP


One witness told police the suspect pointed the gun at Chandler, shot him as he was sleeping, and Chandler slid to the floor, Hingeley said.

The witness said the suspect was “aiming at certain people” and not shooting randomly, according to Hingeley.

Responding officers found Chandler and Perry dead on the bus, Hingeley said. Davis died from his wounds at a hospital, he said.

The public defender appointed to represent the suspect did not address the substance of the charges Wednesday. She also declined comment outside of court.

The judge set a December status hearing in the case.

Authorities said the suspect was able to flee the shooting scene, setting off a manhunt and 12-hour campus lockdown before he was taken into custody elsewhere in the state late Monday morning. The suspect faces three counts of second-degree murder, two counts of malicious wounding and additional gun-related charges.

The violence at the state’s flagship public university has set off days of mourning among students and faculty, the broader Charlottesville community and other supporters. Classes resumed Wednesday.

University President Jim Ryan said Monday that authorities did not have a “full understanding” of the motive behind the shooting. Court documents filed so far in the matter have offered no additional insight, and Hingeley did not address a possible motive Wednesday.

In a video statement posted to Facebook on Wednesday night, Ryan said “it’s possible, and perhaps likely, that we will never find one single thing that will explain this. It may also be that we never truly understand why this happened.” 

Ryan said that the school is “inviting an external review with respect to the university’s interactions with the suspect, and whether we did all we could to prevent or avoid this tragedy.”

Flowers were left outside Scott Stadium at a makeshift memorial for three slain University of Virginia football players on November 14, 2022, in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Win McNamee/Getty Images


Also Wednesday, the school announced that it was canceling its final home game of the season scheduled for Saturday against Coastal Carolina. Ryan said Wednesday night that there would instead be a memorial service Saturday “to honor the lives” of the three slain football players, along with the two other students who were wounded. 

In announcing the cancellation, the university said in a news release that no decision has been made yet about whether UVA will participate in its final game of the season Nov. 26 against Virginia Tech in Blacksburg.

The suspect was a member of the football team during the 2018 season, a one-semester walk-on, according to athletics director Carla Williams.

In interviews, his father has expressed confusion and astonishment and apologized to the victims’ families.

Of the two students who were hospitalized, one was discharged from the medical center Tuesday, according to Eric Swensen, a health system spokesperson.

Family members of Mike Hollins, a running back on the team, have said he underwent a second surgery Tuesday.

In her first television interview since the shooting, Hollins’ mother Brenda Hollins told CBS News that her son does not yet know three of his friends and teammates were killed.

In court Wednesday, Hingeley also reviewed the suspect’s past criminal record. In February 2021, he was charged in Chesterfield County with possession of a concealed handgun without a permit and later given a 12-month suspended sentence, Hingeley said.

At the time of that arrest, the suspect had two outstanding warrants in connection with a hit-and-run accident with property damage and reckless driving from Petersburg. He was convicted of both charges and also given 12-month suspended sentences on both, Hingeley said.

The university has said the suspect’s failure to report the misdemeanor concealed weapon conviction was a consideration in an ongoing review of him by its threat-assessment team. The university initially said its student affairs office had escalated the suspect’s case in late October to the University Judiciary Committee, a student-run body that could have enacted disciplinary action. But late Tuesday night, a spokesperson confirmed the university had not actually escalated the report and was working on doing so.

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A dormant volcano is waking up after sleeping for more than 800 years

An ancient and dormant volcano is waking up after nearly 800 years. The volcano, known as Mt. Edgecumbe, is found just 15 miles west of Sitka, Alaska. Scientists believe that the massive volcano has been dormant for around 800 to 900 years. Now, though, it appears to be waking up, which could spell disaster for nearby towns.

Back in April 2022, Mt. Edgecumbe experienced a small swarm of earthquakes, according to the Alaskan reporting channel KTVF. Scientists were attracted to the activity and began to look into it, discovering that deformities at the surface level of the volcano had seen a change of around 10.6 inches. The changes, they say, can be attributed to magma rising, proof that this dormant volcano is waking up.

The data, which they found by using a new analysis system, showed that the magma had been rising since at least 2018, at a constant rate of 3.4 inches per year. It’s very rare for an inactive or extinct volcano like Mt. Edgecumbe to become active again. So, seeing activity return to the dormant volcano is intriguing. The volcano also rests upon a “transform fault,” which adds even more intrigue to the case.

Extinct volcano of Mount Edgecumbe rises above the harbor town of Sitka in Alaska Image source: steheap / Adobe

This is particularly intriguing because, normally, volcanos on these kinds of fault lines don’t see eruptions, and they’re unlikely to be active. So, the possibility that this dormant volcano is now waking up is even more of a mystery. Of course, there are currently no signs that the volcano is going to erupt anytime soon.

Volcanos are terrifying points of nature. Not only can they unleash massive earthquakes, but they can also create islands in the Pacific Ocean. When you consider how these natural occurrences have become a driving point for disaster movies, too, it’s intriguing to think of how much we could learn from a dormant volcano that may be waking up.

Further, researchers like Dr. Ronni Grapenthin, an associate professor of Geodesy at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, told KTVF that if any eruptions come, there will be plenty of signs. As noted above, the last eruption of this dormant volcano appears to have happened around 800 to 900 years ago, based on history based down by Alaska natives. That eruption may have been very localized, though.

What is concerning, though, is that Grapenthin believes this volcano could be capable of erupting in different ways. Luckily, if the dormant volcano continues waking up, there should be plenty of smoke to let the townspeople in Sitka know what is going on.



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Not Sleeping Enough Spikes Chronic Disease Risk — Best Life

As we get older, we become more and more aware of how our lifestyle impacts our health. Maybe when you were in your twenties, leftover pizza for breakfast and cheese fries for dinner seemed like perfectly reasonable choices—but now, you know that eating a healthy diet can potentially add years to your life. And while couch surfing may have been your favorite kind of “exercise” back in the day, we now know that even getting as little as ten minutes of physical exercise a day is beneficial to many aspects of our wellness, including brain health.

Read on to find out about another daily—or rather, nightly—habit that affects your wellness, and why doing it on a regular basis can lead to a host of health problems.

READ THIS NEXT: If You Do This When You Sleep, Talk to Your Doctor, Study Says.

fizkes/iStock

Turning 50 is a milestone, and while age may just be a number, this one brings some potential changes in your health. Some of those are positive, according to WebMD. “You’ll go into your 50s with more brain function than you had when you were 25,” says the site. And when it comes to mental health, “nearly 95 percent of people who are 50 or older say they’re ‘satisfied’ or ‘very satisfied’ with their lives,” their experts report.

In other ways, however, your health may be more vulnerable. Your immune system, one you hit age 50, “can be slower to go after viruses and other outside threats,” warns WebMD. “And your body no longer makes as many ‘fighter’ cells to destroy infections as it used to [so] you’re more likely to get sick with the flu, pneumonia, or tetanus.” Your cardiovascular health is at greater risk, as well. “Once you hit your 50s, your chances of a heart attack go up,” the site says.

Ridofranz/iStock

Different factors can contribute to an increased risk of chronic disease after age 50. The ​​National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (NCCDPHP) reports that the main lifestyle choices that put people at risk for chronic disease such as kidney disease, stroke, and cancer are tobacco use, poor nutrition, inadequate physical activity, and excessive alcohol intake.

Other contributing risk factors are less well-known. For example, one study showed that overuse of antibiotics can potentially increase your risk of cognitive decline—and a new study says your sleep habits can play an important role in your risk of chronic disease.

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Whether you’ve always been a night owl who got by on very little sleep, or your nightly routine has shifted over the years, many people in their 50s and older don’t get the recommended amount of sleep each night.

“Our sleep patterns often change, and we may find it more difficult to get a full night’s rest,” says Sony Sherpa, MD, focuses on holistic health in her medical practice. “This can be due to several factors, including medical conditions, medications, stress, and changes in our circadian rhythms.”

Adequate sleep is vital for our health, and not getting enough can have serious repercussions. “This is because not letting our bodies recover, and pushing them beyond their limits, can make us more susceptible to chronic diseases and illnesses,” says Sherpa. “Think about it like this: if you don’t give your body the chance to properly recover at night, it will have to work twice as hard during the day just to keep up.”

PeopleImages/iStock

A study published in PLOS One this month says that for people over 50, getting five or fewer hours of sleep a night can cause serious health problems, including an increased risk of chronic disease. “For those whose sleep was tracked at age 50, people who slept five hours or less a night faced a 30 percent higher risk that they would develop multiple chronic diseases over time than those who slept at least seven hours a night,” CNN reported. “At 60, it was a 32 percent increased risk, and at 70, it was a 40 percent greater risk.”

In addition to the health risks inherent in inadequate sleep, being fatigued makes it harder “to live a healthy lifestyle and make positive choices for our health,” advises Sherpa. “For instance, exercising may seem much harder when you’re tired, so you’re less likely to do it, [and] eating a nutritious diet can also be difficult when you have no energy, as unhealthy foods are usually easier and quicker to consume.”

“For all these reasons, it’s important to try and get a good night’s sleep, even as we age,” says Sherpa, who notes that helpful lifestyle choices include reducing your caffeine intake, practicing a consistent bedtime routine, and trying out relaxation techniques.

“Never take sleep for granted,” Sherpa says. “It’s crucial for our overall health and well-being.”

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Sleeping 5 hours or fewer could put you at risk of multiple chronic diseases, study finds

Getting just five hours of sleep or fewer every night is associated with a higher likelihood of being diagnosed with multiple chronic diseases, a new study found. (lightpoet, Shutterstock)

Estimated read time: 4-5 minutes

TORONTO, Canada — A new study using data that spans 25 years has found that getting just five hours of sleep or fewer every night is associated with a higher likelihood of being diagnosed with multiple chronic diseases.

The study, which looked at the sleep duration of more than 7,000 participants at the ages of 50, 60 and 70, was published Tuesday in the peer-reviewed journal PLOS Medicine.

Those who reported regularly getting five hours of sleep or fewer at age 50 were 40% more likely to have been diagnosed with two or more chronic diseases over the past 25 years, compared to people who slept around seven hours a night, the study found.

Severine Sabia of University College London’s Institute of Epidemiology and Health and the lead author of the study, said in a press release that “as people get older, their sleep habits and sleep structure change.”

But getting seven to eight hours each night is still recommended, regardless of age.

Previous research has suggested that sleep durations above or below this recommended level may be associated with individual chronic diseases, Sabia noted.

A separate U.S. study published last week found that people who slept fewer than seven hours had a higher prevalence of heart disease risk factors, and that poor sleep is common among Americans.

Sabia and her team set out to investigate whether there was an association with less sleep and the risk of developing multiple chronic conditions, and researchers say that’s exactly what they found.

“Our findings show that short sleep duration is also associated with multimorbidity,” Sabia said.

Multimorbidity simply means the co-occurrence of two or more chronic conditions. It’s something that becomes more likely as we age, but researchers expressed concerned as it appears to be on the rise in some regions.

“Multimorbidity is on the rise in high-income countries, and more than half of older adults now have at least two chronic diseases,” Sabia said. “This is proving to be a major challenge for public health, as multimorbidity is associated with high health care service use, hospitalizations and disability.”

For this study, researchers looked at data from the Whitehall II cohort study, a database of more than 10,000 people who were employed in the London offices of the British Civil Service at the beginning of the data collection phase in 1985.

Participants then reported for followups to track their health as they aged.

They self-reported on their sleep duration around six times between 1985 and 2016. Researchers looked at this data and isolated sleep duration data given from participants when they were 50, 60 and 70 years of age, looking at around 7,000 participants in total.

They then looked at whether these participants had any chronic conditions, and, if so, when they developed.

Their definition of chronic diseases included diabetes, cancer, coronary heart disease, stroke, heart failure, chronic kidney disease, liver disease, depression, dementia, Parkinson’s disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and arthritis.

Supporting previous research regarding the risk of individual chronic illnesses, sleeping for five hours or fewer at age 50 was associated with a 20% risk of being diagnosed with a single chronic illness, compared to those getting the recommended hours.

They found that those who reported regularly sleeping for five hours or fewer at the age of 50, 60 and 70 had a 30%-40% increased risk of multimorbidity compared to people who were sleeping for around seven hours a night.

They also found that those who reported five hours of sleep at age 50 were 25 per cent more likely to have subsequently died at some point across the 25-year followup period — an association that may have to do with the increased risk of chronic diseases that could be responsible for mortality, researchers explained.

But does sleeping longer than advised have any associations with chronic illness?

According to the research, it might when we’re getting up into our 60s and 70s, but perhaps not before.

When researchers looked at whether sleeping for nine hours or more had any negative health outcomes, there was an association between the incidence of multimorbidity at age 60 and age 70.

However, they found no clear association between extended sleep durations at age 50 in healthy people and multimorbidity.

If participants already had one chronic illness at age 50, long sleepers did have a 35% increased risk of developing another illness, perhaps due to underlying health conditions, researchers suggest.


This research adds to a growing body of research that highlights the importance of getting a good night’s sleep.

–Jo Whitmore, British Heart Foundation


Jo Whitmore, a senior cardiac nurse at the British Heart Foundation who was not involved in the research, said in the release that “Getting enough sleep allows your body to rest.

“There are a host of other ways that poor sleep could increase the risk of heart disease or stroke, including by increasing inflammation and increasing blood pressure,” she added.

“This research adds to a growing body of research that highlights the importance of getting a good night’s sleep.”

Sabia said that getting a good night’s sleep requires “good sleep hygiene, such as making sure the bedroom is quiet, dark and a comfortable temperature before sleeping.

“It’s also advised to remove electronic devices and avoid large meals before bedtime. Physical activity and exposure to light during the day might also promote good sleep.”

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Turns out, sleeping for only five hours can be harmful to health — so, for how long should you?

According to a new study, published in PLoS Medicine, sleeping for just five hours every night may be bad for health. The study further noted that those who slept five hours or less, and were aged 50 years, had a “30 per cent greater risk of multiple ailments than those who slept seven hours”. In fact, the study which analysed 7,864 UK civil servants’ sleep suggested that shorter sleep at 50 was also associated with a higher risk of death during the study period, mainly linked to the increased risk of chronic disease.

The intention of the study was to gauge sleep‘s association with “multimorbidity, common in older adults, which remains poorly understood”. Examining data from the Whitehall II cohort study to extract sleep duration at ages 50, 60, and 70, the research tracked multimorbidity over a 25-year follow-up period.

What is a sleep cycle?

Taking a cue from the research, it is paramount to understand a normal sleep cycle. During a normal sleep period, one progresses through four to five sleep cycles, according to sleepfoundation.org. “Each sleep cycle is made up of four individual sleep stages. The four stages of sleep are further broken down into two categories: rapid eye movement (REM) and non-REM sleep. These categories are important because what happens during REM sleep is dramatically different from what happens during non-REM stages,” it read.

The first three stages of sleep are composed of non-REM activity such that “it’s easiest to be awoken during these first two stages”, the body is in deep sleep in stage 3 which is the “recovery mode”. This is where “overall brain activity slows and shows a tell-tale pattern of pulses of activity1 that are believed to help prevent unwanted awakenings” it noted.

The site also mentioned that the fourth stage is REM sleep. “During REM periods, brain activity shoots back up to levels similar to when you’re awake – which explains why REM is associated with the most intense dreams. While breathing and heart rate increase during REM sleep, most muscles are paralysed, which keeps us from acting out those vivid dreams,” it added.

Notably, each sleep cycle takes between 70 and 120 minutes.

Why is sleep essential?

According to sleepfoundation.org, sleep allows the brain and body to slow down and engage in processes of recovery, promoting better physical and mental performance the next day and over the long-term.

Experts recommend seven or eight hours of sleep every night. “Currently, owing to stress and hectic schedules, about 35 per cent people fail to get a good night’s sleep. This, in turn, tends to affect their health,” said Dr Satish Bhalgat, dentist specialised in sleep dentistry, ACI Cumballa Hill Hospital.

Ensure you sleep for at least seven hours every night (Source: Getty Images/Thinkstock)

*Sleep reduces the chances of heart attacks and strokes.

*Sleep is not only essential for your physical well-being but your mental well-being too. “A good sleep routine will help you tackle depression, stress, and even inflammation. It will also enhance the function of your immune system,” said Dr Ravi Shekhar Jha, director and head, pulmonology, Fortis Hospitals, Faridabad. Adding, Dr Aniket Mule, consultant internal medicine, Wockhardt Hospitals Mira Road said that one may encounter memory problems, poor cognitive health, weight gain, low sex drive, heart issues, poor decision-making, lack of judgment, irritability, agitation, loneliness, skin problems, weak immune system, depression, increased appetite, and even eye bags.

*It can reduce the risk of road and work-related accidents.

*Tackle ghrelin and leptin, which are responsible for appetite. Insufficient sleep can lead to cravings and binge eating.

Dr Jha urged people to aim for “uninterrupted eight hours of sleep”. “Constant lack of adequate sleep is associated with risk of heart attack, anxiety, diabetes, hypertension, reduced memory, and stroke. It may also lead to obesity and depression,” Dr Jha told indianexpress.com while explaining that “reason of inadequate sleep, in most situations, is curable”. “Science has proved that if someone sleeps for 7-8 hours per day and doesn’t wake up in between, the concentration and efficiency improves significantly,” he added.

It is imperative to speak to an expert and improve your sleep pattern, Dr Mule advised. “Get sound sleep of at least 7-8 hours to function at your best. It will keep you happier and healthy, maintain normal blood pressure, reduce the risk of heart attack, and diabetes, sharpen your memory, boost metabolism, improve immunity, increase productivity at work, and perk up your mood,” Dr Mule told this outlet.

Dr Vikrant Shah, consulting physician, intensivist, and infectious disease specialist, Zen Multispeciality Hospital Chembur shared a few tips that can help

*To sleep well, follow the same sleep and wake-up timings.
*Try to avoid any disturbance while sleeping. Do not use any electronic gadgets or watch television before sleeping.
*You can read or listen to soft music before sleeping.
*Try to maintain a good room temperature. This will help to induce sleep. Avoid too much lighting and disturbance in the room. Try to block light by using curtains or blinds. The room needs to be dark and calm.
*Use a proper mattress and pillow, as recommended by the doctor.
*Do not have coffee, alcohol, or sodas just before hitting the sack.
*Try to avoid heavy meals just before sleeping as they can give you acidity.
*Exercise and eat a well-balanced diet to sleep peacefully.
*Try to stay stress-free while sleeping or do not overthink. You can meditate, too.

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Frances Tiafoe: From sleeping at a tennis center to the US Open semifinals

It felt like a seminal moment in the 24-year-old American’s career; a culmination of hard work and raw talent which has long been heralded as the potential future of men’s tennis in the country.

Now, with Tiafoe reaching the semifinals by beating Andrey Rublev in straight sets Wednesday, he has recorded the best grand slam result of his career — the achievement made all the more impressive given his humble beginnings.

The crowd at Arthur Ashe Stadium delighted in the play of Tiafoe, the first Black American man to reach a US Open semifinal since Ashe in 1972. And in a match where he didn’t lose a service game to the world No. 11, he couldn’t let them down.

“I feel so at home at courts like this. This court is unbelievable. You guys get so far behind me, you know I want to play and want to give it my best. I always find a way somehow on this court. I always try to play great tennis and I have been,” he said in an on-court interview just after the math. Let’s enjoy this one. We got two more guys. We got two more.”

Tiafoe’s route into tennis has been in no ways traditional.

His parents met in the US after leaving Sierra Leone and had twins together, Franklin and Frances.

Their father, Constant Tiafoe, started working at the Junior Tennis Champions Center in Washington, D.C. back in 1999 and eventually moved into one of its vacant storage rooms while working around the clock.

His two boys would sometimes stay with him, sleeping on a massage table, while their mother worked night shifts as a nurse.

The unusual gateway into the sport gave Tiafoe an opportunity to start developing his skills and, after beginning to train at the facility, he didn’t look back.

“Obviously, I wasn’t the wealthy kid or wasn’t having all the new stuff or whatever. But I was just living life. I could play tennis for free, the sport I loved,” he told CNN Sport back in 2015, adding that he wouldn’t change his upbringing for the world.

Driven by the work ethic of his parents, he won the prestigious Orange Bowl — one of tennis’ most prized junior tournaments — at 15, becoming the youngest boys’ singles champion in the tournament’s history.

He joined a list of previous champions which included Roger Federer, Andy Roddick, Ivan Lendl, Jim Courier, John McEnroe and Bjorn Borg.

It was a sign of things to come.

Maturing on tour

Tiafoe turned professional in 2015 and started getting familiar with the rigors of the senior tour.

He broke into the world’s top 100 and began to assert himself at grand slams — reaching his first quarterfinal at the Australian Open in 2019 before losing to Nadal.

Three years on and he found himself Wednesday at another quarterfinal as the world No. 26, only this time he felt more ready to grasp the opportunity.

“Honestly, when I first came on the scene, I wasn’t ready for it mentally and mature enough,” he said on court after beating Nadal. “I’ve been able to develop and I have a great team around me.

“I’m happy I won in front of my mom, my dad, my girlfriend and my team and to have them see what I did.”

While he cements himself as a contender on the court, Tiafoe is also pursuing social justice off it.

In 2022, he told CNN Sport that the lack of diversity in the sport had made him feel like an “outsider,” and he vowed to continue fighting for equality while he still had the platform to do so.

He created a protest video in 2022 to raise awareness of racial injustices after the death of George Floyd sparked protests across the world.

In collaboration with a host of Black players and coaches — such as Serena Williams and Coco Gauff — he posted the “Racquets down, hands up” video to his social media channels.

“Are we going to help everyone? Of course not, but I’m definitely going to help as many people as I can. That’s my duty,” he told CNN Sport at the time.

His performances have even attracted the attention of some of the biggest names in sport, with NBA star LeBron James congratulating Tiafoe on making the quarterfinals.

“Thank you big bro. We got some more work to do,” Tiafoe responded on Twitter.

Make no mistake, though, this is no overnight success story. It’s a product of thousands of hours of work and a mentality that won’t take no for an answer.

However, while the weight of a nation rests on his shoulders, Tiafoe has always just focused on making his parents proud.

“With them trying so hard, I felt like I didn’t want to let them down,” he told CNN Sport in 2015. “I felt like I didn’t want to let the opportunities go for granted.”

CNN’s Jacob Lev, Steve Almasy, Will Edmonds and Christina Macfarlane contributed reporting.



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Sleeping Giant Could End Deep Ocean Life

Red medusa found just off the bottom of the deep sea in Alaska. Credit: Hidden Ocean 2005/NOAA

Continental movement is capable of throttling marine oxygen.

A previously overlooked factor — the position of continents — helps fill Earth’s oceans with life-supporting oxygen. Continental movement could ultimately have the opposite effect, killing the majority of deep ocean creatures.

“Continental drift seems so slow, like nothing drastic could come from it, but when the ocean is primed, even a seemingly tiny event could trigger the widespread death of marine life,” said Andy Ridgwell, University of California, Riverside geologist. Ridgwell is co-author of a new study on forces affecting oceanic oxygen.

As the water at the ocean’s surface approaches the north or south pole, it becomes colder and denser and then sinks. When the water sinks, it transports oxygen pulled from Earth’s atmosphere down to the ocean floor. 

Fish on a deep reef at Pearl and Hermes Atoll in Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument near Hawaii. Credit: Greg McFall, NOAA

Eventually, a return flow brings nutrients released from sunken organic matter back to the ocean’s surface, where it fuels the growth of plankton. Today’s oceans feature an incredible diversity of fish and other animals that are supported by both the uninterrupted supply of oxygen to lower depths and organic matter produced at the surface.

New research has found that this circulation of oxygen and nutrients can end quite suddenly. Using complex computer models, the scientists investigated whether the locations of continental plates affect how the ocean moves oxygen around. They were surprised to find that it does.

This finding led by researchers based at UC Riverside is detailed in the journal Nature. It was published today (August 17, 2022).

Resting balloonfish near the Florida Keys. Credit: OAR/National Undersea Research Program (NURP); University of Maine

“Many millions of years ago, not so long after animal life in the ocean got started, the entire global ocean circulation seemed to periodically shut down,” said Ridgwell. “We were not expecting to find that the movement of continents could cause surface waters and oxygen to stop sinking, and possibly dramatically affecting the way life evolved on Earth.”

Up until now, models used to investigate the evolution of marine oxygen over the last 540 million years were relatively simple and didn’t account for ocean circulation. In these models, ocean anoxia — times when oceanic oxygen disappeared — implied a drop in atmospheric oxygen concentrations.

“Scientists previously assumed that changing oxygen levels in the ocean mostly reflected similar fluctuations in the atmosphere,” said Alexandre Pohl, first author of the study and former UCR paleoclimate modeler, now at Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté in France.

Diorama of ancient Ediacaran period sealife displayed at the Smithsonian Institution. Credit: Smithsonian

For the first time,  this study used a model in which the ocean was represented in three dimensions, and in which ocean currents were accounted for. According to the results, collapse in global water circulation leads to a stark separation between oxygen levels in the upper and lower depths.

That separation meant the entire seafloor, except for shallow places close to the coast, entirely lost oxygen for many tens of millions of years, until about 440 million years ago at the start of the Silurian period.

“Circulation collapse would have been a death sentence for anything that could not swim closer to the surface and the life-giving oxygen still present in the atmosphere,” Ridgwell said. Creatures of the deep include bizarre-looking fish, giant worms and crustaceans, squid, sponges, and more.

The paper does not address if or when Earth might expect a similar event in the future. In fact, it is difficult to identify when a collapse might occur, or what triggers it. However, existing climate models confirm that increasing global warming will weaken ocean circulation, and some models even predict an eventual collapse of the branch of circulation that starts in the North Atlantic.

“We’d need a higher resolution climate model to predict a mass extinction event,” Ridgwell said. “That said, we do already have concerns about water circulation in the North Atlantic today, and there is evidence that the flow of water to depth is declining.”

In theory, an unusually warm summer or the erosion of a cliff could trigger a cascade of processes that upends life as it appears today, Ridgwell said.

“You’d think the surface of the ocean, the bit you might surf or sail on, is where all the action is. But underneath, the ocean is tirelessly working away, providing vital oxygen to animals in the dark depths,” Ridgwell said.

“The ocean allows life to flourish, but it can take that life away again. Nothing rules that out as continental plates continue to move.”

Reference: “Continental configuration controls ocean oxygenation during the Phanerozoic” by Alexandre Pohl, Andy Ridgwell, Richard G. Stockey, Christophe Thomazo, Andrew Keane, Emmanuelle Vennin and Christopher R. Scotese, 17 August 2022, Nature.
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05018-z



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