Climate change could steal our sleep: study

Web Desk
May 21, 2022

For lower-income countries like India and Pakistan, risks of temperature effects on sleep loss are significantly higher

Climate change has the potential to cause sleep deprivation.—Pixabay/Cottonbro
Climate change has the potential to cause sleep deprivation.—Pixabay/Cottonbro


A new study claims that climate change has the potential to cause sleep deprivation.

A research article named "Rising temperatures erode human sleep globally" published in One Earthstudied data from sleep trackers worn by 47,628 anonymous people across 68 countries over a two-year period — September 2015 through October 2017.

The study predicted that by the year 2099, rising temperatures are likely to steal50 to 58 hours of sleep per person per year.

For lower-income countries like India and Pakistan, the risks of temperature effects on sleep loss are significantly higher. The study also says that the elderly and females are most likely to be affected.

During the hot nights in the future, people will sleep late and rise early, which will result in "several adverse physical and mental outcomes."

To fall asleep, our body temperature needs to drop which will become harder with the world becoming warmer.

The author of the study, Kelton Minor, said that our lives depend upon "maintaining a stable core body temperature."

"Yet each night our bodies do something remarkable without most of us knowing: they shed heat from our core into the surrounding environment by dilating blood vessels and increasing blood flow to our hands and feet."

Therefore, the surroundings of our bodies need to be cooler than us, Minor explained.

While there were some limitations to the study, Minor said that "in this study, we provide the first planetary-scale evidence that warmer-than-average temperatures erode human sleep."


Advertisement

More From health