Do you have COVID-somnia?
Dr Jenny Brockis
Lifestyle Medicine Physician | Empowering you to be happier and healthier, and thrive in life and work | LinkedIn Top Voice
COVID-somnia. It’s a great term isn’t it and I wish I could take credit for it but someone else (sorry I can’t remember who) did.
Has Covid affected your sleep pattern?
I’ve been asking my clients how they’ve been sleeping since the onset of the global pandemic.
With around 30% of the adult population chronically sleep-deprived even before the arrival of the global pandemic, reported sleep difficulties have soared since the arrival of Covid-19.
In the UK , The British Sleep Society found around 75% of adults have experienced a change in their sleep during the pandemic with 50% reporting getting less refreshing sleep.
This is worrying because sleep is essential to our health and wellbeing and very survival.
Meanwhile, new?research?suggests that sleep evolved independently and BEFORE the development of our wonderful brain. Weird huh! Studies on hydra, aquatic creatures similar to jellyfish, which have nerves, but no centralised brain have been found to exhibit 4-hour cycles of active and sleep-like states.
Fascinating stuff and if you’re wondering… so what…
The so what is that the findings also included the discovery hydra experience similar sleep regulatory functions similar to ours, where our sleep depends on our circadian rhythm, that includes the daily cycle of hormones and exposure to light and dark.
Meaning regardless of the fact you’re not a hydra or a jellyfish how you go about your daily life, the choices you make around when to go to bed, how much sleep you get and whether you work night shifts will influence YOUR regulatory systems and not necessarily for the better.
Now add in the impact of lockdown, working from home, binge-watching Netflix late into the night, exercising less, relying on alcohol or cigarettes or comfort food to make ourselves feel better, living with high stress and feelings of anxiety, uncertainty or frustration. All these things have impacted our ability to get a good night’s sleep and disrupt normal regulatory functions.
Other research has reported how those people directly impacted by the virus, especially those with the Long-Covid syndrome have been had ongoing difficulty sleeping following their recovery from the infection.
Why?
Researchers in the US believe the reason is due to inflammation caused by the virus leading to cellular injury or miscommunication in the brain.?
Insufficient sleep hinders the brain’s self-cleaning process to get rid of metabolic waste. And let’s not forget how sleep is essential for regulating metabolism, glucose and hormones concerned with controlling weight. Poor quality and insufficient sleep plays havoc with this too.
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The good news (if there is any) is the assumption that the sleep disturbance associated with the Covid pandemic is temporary and can be managed, modulated and possibly overcome. Phew.
Sleep professor?Michelle Miller?from the University of Warwick UK explains it’s the same mechanism as when we are fighting any form of illness including Covid 19. It’s normal to feel more tired than usual. This is your body’s way of telling you, you need more rest and sleep to heal.
The message about getting a good night’s sleep has never been more important and especially now because getting enough good quality sleep?strengthens?the immune system.
Previous studies have shown that the efficacy of immunisation relates to how well you slept the night before you receive your shot. A bad night’s sleep may reduce the vaccine’s efficacy.
Which means consistently getting a good night’s sleep as the Covid-19 vaccination programs are rolled out is?especially?important.
This is where lifestyle factors come into play.
And importantly DON’T stress about not sleeping properly as that merely compounds the problem!
If your sleep pattern is causing you to function at less than your best, making you tired during the day, and you’ve noticed you’re more grouchy, irritable and less productive, it’s time to talk to your health practitioner about what else you can try to improve your sleep (without the need for medication). There are a number of effective strategies that can help including CBT-insomnia.
As for why we’re having those vivid dreams, well, that’s another story for another time.
Do you have COVID-somnia?
Hi, I'm Dr Jenny Brockis. I'm a medical practitioner and board-certified lifestyle medicine physician, keynote speaker and best-selling author.
I help people who are over-busy, overstretched and exhausted find the calm, clarity and confidence needed to enjoy a successful career AND live a fulfilled and rich life.
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