The Modern Sleep Crisis is Increasing Lifestyle Diseases!
Oliver Thompson
Personal Trainer | Helping you exercise for longevity and build an energised, pain-free, and resilient body... for the long haul! | Wellness Columnist | Featured in GQ, Men's Health, The Standard, Insider, Esquire & More
We’re witnessing a growth in lifestyle-linked diseases.
Metabolic disease, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, obesity, and cancer have all been increasing over the past few decades. Diabetes has seen a fourfold increase in the past 35 years, cardiovascular disease is responsible for 31% of deaths globally, and half of all adult cancer cases could have been prevented through lifestyle improvements.
Research suggests that the deterioration of sleep may be one of, if not the major factor contributing to this trend.
It's increasingly difficult to sleep well, as the modern world seems designed to challenge our sleep at every turn.
The key reasons we fall asleep are under threat. Many of us are not physically active enough to increase sleep pressure. We're also struggling to maintain consistent sleep and wake times, experiencing less exposure to natural light, and enduring excessive artificial light in the evenings. Along with this, diets heavy in ultra-processed foods are disrupting our sleep, as these foods can lead to inflammation, spikes in blood sugar, and poor gut health, all of which can interfere with sleep quality. This combination of factors is disturbing our circadian rhythm - the intracellular body clock that regulates our sleep-wake cycles.
Many people today are waking and sleeping at different times each day. In the UK, only 25% of adults walk 10,000 steps per day. People are consuming excessive caffeine - sometimes coffees late into the afternoon - and drinking alcohol before bed to relax. Meanwhile, they get very little natural light in the morning but plenty of blue light at night, often while replying to stressful emails at 9 PM with a crime drama on in the background. With all this, why would the body fall asleep?
This cycle is a huge reason for the poor national sleep statistics. The UK average is just 6.1 hours of sleep per night. This shortfall has profound implications for our health, exacerbating the prevalence of lifestyle diseases.
To tackle the sleep crisis, we must confront these modern challenges directly. By prioritising physical activity, maintaining regular sleep routines, increasing exposure to natural light, reducing nighttime artificial light, and better managing caffeine and alcohol intake, we can begin to restore our sleep and improve our overall health.
What can we do?
Here are the 5 primary levers you can pull right now to regain healthy sleep:
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It’s clear: our modern lifestyle is wreaking havoc on both our sleep and our health. But the good news is, we have the power to change it. By making small, deliberate adjustments, we can take back control of our rest and, in turn, our well-being.
So, the question is: What step will you take tonight to prioritise your sleep and protect your future health?
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5 个月Oliver Thompson have you met Nicole Ratcliffe ?? A few of us are informally keeping a thread and taking some bold moves to get sleep FAR MORE on the radar- you might enjoy being part of it! Let us know!