https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL1103/S00145/sleep-awareness-week-global-sleep-emergency-persits.htm
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Sleep Awareness Week: Global Sleep Emergency Persits |
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(Ed. Note: Dr. James Murtagh is Medical Director of the Eastgate Sleepcare Center in Cincinnati Ohio )
"To achieve the impossible dream, try going to sleep." Joan Klempner
San Diego, California- Sleep Scientists from around the globe highlighted Sleep Awareness week. Famously, Anthony Burgess wrote that "Laugh and the world laughs with you , snore and you sleep alone." Today, Burgess could only call the nightmare of sleepy drivers a "real horrorshow," and remind us that " every dogma has its day." Eye-popping studies released by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) this week reveal that 80 million Americans are sleep deprived, and more than one in twenty drivers admit to falling asleep at the wheel. Sleep disorders contribute to diabetes, hypertension and cardiovascular disease. Persons who sleep less than seven hours a night live shorter and less productive lives. Half of Americans are so sleepy their work, their relationships and happiness are impaired. Lack of sleep causes depression, weight gain and death.
If there were a fifth horseman of the apocalypse, surely he would be sleep deprivation. He would be the palest of the pale riders.
The National Sleep Foundation (NSF) designated March 7-13, 2011 as the fourteenth annual national sleep awareness week. As we prepare to wind our clocks forward for daylight savings on March 13, it is time for patients, doctors and lawmakers to take stock.
Is it an exaggeration to say our society faces a crisis in sleep disorders? The father of modern sleep medicine, Dr. William Dement writes: "Sleep disorders ..have not been adequately addressed by the medical profession; .. the absence of awareness of these problems relating to sleep is so pervasive and the consequences are potentially so dire as to constitute a national emergency". Richard L. Gelula, NSF's chief executive officer states that " sleepiness that permeates our society has serious consequences, and Americans' poor sleep is creating a public health and safety crisis in need of immediate attention,"
Dement links many of national major disasters, including the Exxon Valdez and Challenger can be traced to sleep disorders. Maybe "Mothers against drunk driving" need to change their focus to "Mothers against drunk and sleepy driving." The average sleep-apnea-induced truck disaster kills 4.2 persons. Friends cannot allow friends to drive sleepy.
Among the
key findings of the CDC research reviewed:
* 4.7% of
respondents say they had fallen asleep while driving at
least once in the past 30 days.
* 7.3% of people who got less than s even hours of sleep report nodding off at the wheel, compared to 3% who got more.
* 37.9% of those
questioned said they had fallen asleep unintentionally
during the day at least one time in the past month.
*
Drowsy driving causes an estimated 1,550 deaths a year and
40,000 injuries.
* More than 40 Million Americans suffer
with sleep disorders, and more than 80 million are sleep
deprived
* More than 95% of sleep patients are not
treated
* Almost all sleep disorders can be treated, with
immensely improved quality of life, productivity and life
expectancy Millions are too sleepy even to have satisfying
sex.
* Proper treatment of sleep disorders can result in
improved happiness, improved sex life, and loss of weight,
and overall improved efficiency and energy.
* Minorities,
the poor, the chronically ill, the unemployed and the
elderly are at special risk.
* Direct medical costs of sleep disorders account for more than 30 Billion dollars.
* Lost productivity of sleep deprivation costs $50 to 100 billion
* Sleep Apnea is a major cause of many common conditions, such as hypertension, stroke and sudden death.
Drowsiness is a major threat to military readiness. DoD has made sleep research a top priority, and has allocated more than $100 million this year to study military aspects of sleep. Research suggests enhanced vigilance will lead to a superior warrior.
Overweight men are most likely to have sleep apnea, but no one is immune.
Some good news? Treatment of sleep disorders actually saves money. The overall health costs of a patient suffering from sleep disorders can be cut in half by effective treatment of the sleep disorders. In an era of health reform and scarce resources, preventive medicine must take priority. The nation can not afford to avoid treating sleep problems.
Burgess is just one of hundreds of historical authors to write about sleep. For fun, a list of the top 100 movies concentrating on sleep was compiled: http://www.sleepfoundation.org/top-100-sleep-movies
What can you do? There are seven simple questions your can assess your risk of sleep disorder. Take the simple test at http://www.stanford.edu/~dement/epworth.html . What could be a better use of a few minutes of your time? These few questions can tell you if you need attention from a sleep specialist.
"We are such stuff/ As dreams are made on, and our little life/ Is rounded with a sleep." Shakespeare wrote. How true! As you wind your clock forward, take care to avoid the Clockwork Orange horrorshow of sleep deprivation. Take the the simple screening test. The life you save may be your own, or it may be a loved one.
ENDS