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Scientists find sleeping too much or too little can make you sick

ANI Mar 06, 2023

All kinds of issues can be resolved with a good night's sleep, but recent research suggests that getting enough sleep may also reduce your susceptibility to illness.


Medical students working in doctor's offices were recruited by researchers at the University of Bergen to distribute brief questionnaires to patients asking about recent illnesses and sleep quality.

They discovered that patients with persistent sleep issues were more likely to report needing antibiotics and were more likely to have recently contracted an illness as well as reported sleeping too much or too little.

"Most previous observational studies have looked at the association between sleep and infection in a sample of the general population," said Dr Ingeborg Forthun, corresponding author of the study published in Frontiers in Psychiatry.

"We wanted to assess this association among patients in primary care, where we know that the prevalence of sleep problems is much higher than in the population at large."

Evidence already exists that sleep problems raise the risk of infection: in a previous study, people deliberately infected with rhinovirus were less likely to catch a cold if they reported healthy sleep.

Sleep disturbances are common and treatable, and if a link to infection and a mechanism can be confirmed, it might make it possible to cut down on antibiotic use and protect people against infections before they happen. But experimental studies can't reproduce real-life circumstances.

Forthun and her colleagues gave medical students a questionnaire and asked them to hand it out to patients in the waiting rooms of the general practitioners' surgeries where the students were working.

1,848 surveys were collected across Norway. The surveys asked people to describe their sleep quality -- how long they typically sleep, how well they feel they sleep, and when they prefer to sleep -- as well as whether they had had any infections or used any antibiotics in the past three months. The survey also contained a scale which identifies cases of chronic insomnia disorder.

The scientists found that patients who reported sleeping less than six hours a night were 27 per cent more likely to report an infection, while patients sleeping more than nine hours were 44 per cent more likely to report one. Less than six hours of sleep, or chronic insomnia, also raised the risk that you would need an antibiotic to overcome an infection.

"The higher risk of reporting an infection among patients who reported short or long sleep duration is not that surprising as we know that having an infection can cause both poor sleep and sleepiness," said Forthun.

"But the higher risk of an infection among those with a chronic insomnia disorder indicates that the direction of this relationship also goes in the other direction; poor sleep can make you more susceptible to an infection."

Although there was some potential for bias in the sense that people's recall of sleep or recent health issues is not necessarily perfect, and no clinical information was collected from the doctors who subsequently saw the patients, the study design allowed for the collection of data from a large study group experiencing real-world conditions.

"We don't know why the patients visited their GPs, and it could be that an underlying health problem affects both the risk of poor sleep and risk of infection, but we don't think this can fully explain our results," said Forthun.

She continued: "Insomnia is very common among patients in primary care but found to be under-recognised by general practitioners. Increased awareness of the importance of sleep, not only for general well-being but for patients' health, is needed both among patients and general practitioners." 

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