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n2doc

(47,953 posts)
Sat Jan 7, 2012, 11:51 AM Jan 2012

Sleep Deficit: The Performance Killer

A Conversation with Charles A. Czeisler by Bronwyn Fryer

At 12:30 am on June 10, 2002, Israel Lane Joubert and his family of seven set out for a long drive home following a family reunion in Beaumont, Texas. Joubert, who had hoped to reach home in faraway Fort Worth in time to get to work by 8 am, fell asleep at the wheel, plowing the family’s Chevy Suburban into the rear of a parked 18-wheeler. He survived, but his wife and five of his six children were killed.

The Joubert tragedy underscores a problem of epidemic proportions among workers who get too little sleep. In the past five years, driver fatigue has accounted for more than 1.35 million automobile accidents in the United States alone, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. The general effect of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance is well-known: Stay awake longer than 18 consecutive hours, and your reaction speed, short-term and long-term memory, ability to focus, decision-making capacity, math processing, cognitive speed, and spatial orientation all start to suffer. Cut sleep back to five or six hours a night for several days in a row, and the accumulated sleep deficit magnifies these negative effects. (Sleep deprivation is implicated in all kinds of physical maladies, too, from high blood pressure to obesity.)

Nevertheless, frenzied corporate cultures still confuse sleeplessness with vitality and high performance. An ambitious manager logs 80-hour work weeks, surviving on five or six hours of sleep a night and eight cups of coffee (the world’s second-most widely sold commodity, after oil) a day. A Wall Street trader goes to bed at 11 or midnight and wakes to his BlackBerry buzz at 2:30 am to track opening activity on the DAX. A road warrior lives out of a suitcase while traveling to Tokyo, St. Louis, Miami, and Zurich, conducting business in a cloud of caffeinated jet lag. A negotiator takes a red-eye flight, hops into a rental car, and zooms through an unfamiliar city to make a delicate M&A meeting at 8 in the morning.

People like this put themselves, their teams, their companies, and the general public in serious jeopardy, says Dr. Charles A. Czeisler, the Baldino Professor of Sleep Medicine at Harvard Medical School.1 To him, encouraging a culture of sleepless machismo is worse than nonsensical; it is downright dangerous, and the antithesis of intelligent management. He notes that while corporations have all kinds of policies designed to prevent employee endangerment—rules against workplace smoking, drinking, drugs, sexual harassment, and so on—they sometimes push employees to the brink of self-destruction. Being “on” pretty much around the clock induces a level of impairment every bit as risky as intoxication.

more

http://hbr.org/2006/10/sleep-deficit-the-performance-killer

7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Sleep Deficit: The Performance Killer (Original Post) n2doc Jan 2012 OP
Good article, thanks. mzteris Jan 2012 #1
Interesting article... CanSocDem Jan 2012 #2
Sleep issues need to be the focus of more research. HuckleB Jan 2012 #3
I had sleep issues and didn't even know it EvolveOrConvolve Jan 2012 #4
Indeed, it is. HuckleB Jan 2012 #6
Well good luck with that flamingdem Jan 2012 #5
Room Light Before Bedtime May Impact Sleep Quality, Blood Pressure and Diabetes Risk HuckleB Jan 2012 #7

mzteris

(16,232 posts)
1. Good article, thanks.
Sat Jan 7, 2012, 12:30 PM
Jan 2012

My son has chronic insomnia, but he thinks he's invincible because he's 18! I'm passing this on.

Also, I'm wondering what about those people who really do need "less sleep" than others? My boss is one of those.

 

CanSocDem

(3,286 posts)
2. Interesting article...
Sat Jan 7, 2012, 12:48 PM
Jan 2012


...in that it seems to be defending the socio-business time schedule, that has only fueled an international drug war, incomprehensible social policy, and millions of human lives lost to meta-amphetamines, cocaine and diet pills.

Without, it seems, actually considering the benefits of "sleep deprivation".

In my past life as a long haul truckdriver, I had many opportunities, some planned and some not, to experience 'sleep deprivation'. Aside from the gradual lowering of ones' IQ and the increasing need to focus on the simplest of tasks, the need for sleep can be over-ridden by the need to survive.

There comes a time when it is a struggle to keep your mind moving enough that it can't focus on anything long enough to induce dream-like hallucinations. These, like more explicit hallucinations, can be fought off until you have a safe place to pull over and sleep.

And then as little as 20 minutes can give you enough 'ability' for anothet 200 miles...

An ideal 1000 mile day would be a 3-4 hour sleep and a couple of naps of an 90 min or so.


.



HuckleB

(35,773 posts)
3. Sleep issues need to be the focus of more research.
Sat Jan 7, 2012, 01:02 PM
Jan 2012

They may be undermining huge swaths of the population.

Here's another recent study on the matter:

Naps cut anxiety, up problem solving in tots
http://scienceblog.com/51377/naps-cut-anxiety-up-problem-solving-in-tots/

From the article: “Many young children today are not getting enough sleep, and for toddlers, daytime naps are one way of making sure their ‘sleep tanks’ are set to full each day,” she said. “This study shows insufficient sleep in the form of missing a nap taxes the way toddlers express different feelings, and, over time, may shape their developing emotional brains and put them at risk for lifelong, mood-related problems.”

EvolveOrConvolve

(6,452 posts)
4. I had sleep issues and didn't even know it
Sat Jan 7, 2012, 01:52 PM
Jan 2012

I was diagnosed with Generalized Anxiety Disorder and Chronic Panic Disorder in addition to a myriad of other little things like not being able to concentrate, high blood pressure, and getting sick a lot. For years my doctor couldn't figure out what was causing the problems. I'm not overweight, I don't smoke, drink or do drugs, I'm in good shape and exercise a lot. My diet is pretty good and I got 7-8 hours of sleep every night.

It was a shot in the dark to do the sleep study to test me for sleep apnea, since I didn't have any symptoms other than some occasional snoring. But the sleep study revealed that I had an Apnea Hypopnea Index of 70. A second sleep study came back with an AHI of 84. I had severe sleep apnea, but never knew it.

Once I got on the CPAP machine, my anxiety dropped to nearly nothing, and I haven't had a single panic attack. I haven't been sick in months, my BP is back to normal without drugs, and my daily work performance has increased dramatically. I feel great, and without a lucky guess by my doc I'd still be living in the fog that I didn't even realize was there.

It's amazing how much difference a good night's sleep can make.

HuckleB

(35,773 posts)
6. Indeed, it is.
Sat Jan 7, 2012, 02:40 PM
Jan 2012

Sleep disorders are something that should be explored with anyone who is coming in with anxiety symptoms.

On a more behavioral aspect, it's amazing how many kids I have known who struggled with anxiety, and either had it turn around because they chose to get good sleep, or continued to struggle with it, because "everyone else is up late, so I have to be up late, too!"

http://childrenwithanxiety.com/articles-resources/sleep-habits-can-affect-levels-of-stress-and-anxiety-in-children-and-teens

flamingdem

(39,308 posts)
5. Well good luck with that
Sat Jan 7, 2012, 02:13 PM
Jan 2012

All this jammering about sleep seems patronizing. When you are young you can get a away with it and will continue to do so. Demands are just to great between work and social life when young especially. As far as falling asleep at the wheel, if you have that tendency then it's dumb to drive tired. It's also dumb to drive very stressed out emotionally. So shall we harp on that next?

HuckleB

(35,773 posts)
7. Room Light Before Bedtime May Impact Sleep Quality, Blood Pressure and Diabetes Risk
Sat Jan 7, 2012, 05:08 PM
Jan 2012
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/01/110113082716.htm

How life and available light has changed so fast is an interesting topic for research. And it it probably a necessary topic, to boot.
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