Freakonomics Radio - The Economics of Sleep, Part 1 (Rebroadcast)
Episode Date: March 24, 2016Could a lack of sleep help explain why some people get much sicker than others? ...
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Hey, podcast listeners, it's Stephen Dubner. This week, we are bringing you an episode from
our archives. It's called The Economics of Sleep, Part One. And yes, that means that there is a part
two, which you will hear next week. We thought it was time to replay these episodes because they are
two of our most popular episodes ever. Now, why is that? I think it may be because as much as
people tend to focus on nutrition and exercise as the vital inputs in maintaining the human machine,
sleep often gets overlooked.
So, let's stop overlooking it, yeah?
Hope you enjoy it, and I hope you learn as much about sleep as we did in making this episode. We begin in Brownsville, Brooklyn, at the Brownsville Multiservice Family Health Center.
Graciela Flats, she goes by Grace, is a nurse and the clinic's director of nursing.
She was born in Panama, moved to New York about 20 years ago.
Something that I always say to everybody, I was born to be a nurse.
I love nursing, and I love my patients.
No matter how much you love your job,
Roundsville is not necessarily the first neighborhood
where most people would choose to work.
It's got a lot of crime, a lot of unemployment, and not much money.
You will be surprised to see the income that some people make here.
Approximately between 60-65% of our patients, they are under the poverty level.
The median household income in Brownsville is barely $27,000.
About three-quarters of the residents are African American. Grace Flats is also of
African descent. She says that roughly 90% of the patients in her health clinic are there
for chronic diseases. The core of our services are hypertensive, diabetes, and obesity.
Hypertension, diabetes, and obesity, heart disease too. On the face of it, there's nothing noteworthy about this predominance of chronic diseases.
According to the CDC, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
86% of U.S. healthcare spending goes to treat chronic diseases.
But what is noteworthy is that these conditions are much more concentrated among certain groups of people.
We're talking about a two-fold gap, at least a two-fold gap, for the major killers,
which would of course include heart disease and diabetes.
That's Sherman James. He is a professor of epidemiology at Emory University. In almost every category of health and disease, African Americans lag behind whites, which is a very disturbing fact.
For decades, James has been studying the black-white gap in health.
African Americans, he says, have a substantially higher risk of death from heart disease and stroke.
Blacks are as much as three times more likely than whites to have
high blood pressure.
And high blood pressure develops earlier in adult life for African-Americans
compared to whites.
It's more severe.
So the number one contributor in terms of the persistent racial inequalities in heart
disease is high blood pressure.
This racial health disparity has been known to researchers for decades.
What isn't known is why.
That's really an important fact.
What accounts for that?
There are all sorts of hypotheses.
One that Sherman James has put forward is called John Henryism.
That's from the folk legend about John Henry, the steel-driving man, the old-school strongman who got into a race with a newfangled steam hammer.
John Henry won, but then he collapsed and died.
John Henry's pappy woke him up one midnight.
The idea behind John Henryism is that blacks, because of discrimination and lack of opportunities, have had to work so much harder than whites, even in the same kind of jobs.
I can turn a jack, I can lay a track, I can pick and shovel too.
Can you swing a hammer, boy?
Yes, I'll do anything you hire me to.
And all that hard work, Sherman James says, puts more stress on the body.
The cardiovascular system, the immune system, the endocrine system, the reproductive system.
But even James, who's run study after study, who's an expert on African-American health, admits that none of this is conclusive. Despite efforts to uncover and elucidate the reasons for this persistent gap,
we have achieved only limited insights.
In James's defense, it's really hard to definitively determine cause and effect
when it comes to health outcomes. That's because we as a society don't run big,
randomized controlled trials on people's health to prove what does what.
As a result, we know a lot less than we think we know.
Just look at how much flip-flopping there's been in recent years about something as basic as the nutritional value of carbohydrates versus fats.
When it comes to something as expansive, as variegated, as a health gap between black Americans and white Americans, there are a lot of possible
explanations. Does it have to do with diet or smoking or other behaviors? What about relative
wealth or access to medical care? Maybe there's a genetic explanation.
There's a lot that we as a field just don't know.
Well, there is another theory, the one we'll be talking about today,
that says the black-white health gap might be related to something that all of us do every day,
something that our body forces us to do every day or, more typically, every night.
One area that's been overlooked is sleep.
Lauren Hale is an associate professor of preventive medicine at Stony Brook University.
That's on Long Island in New York.
And I study sleep patterns.
I call it the social patterning of sleep.
That's when people sleep, how long they sleep, how well they sleep.
A lack of sleep has been linked to a variety of health problems, including diabetes, hypertension.
Cardiovascular disease. There's associations with cancer. been linked to a variety of health problems, including diabetes, hypertension, cardiovascular
disease. There's associations with cancer. And as we all know, a lack of sleep can impair our
cognitive functions, our decision making. When Lauren Hale thinks about the huge racial gap in
health that Sherman James described, she wonders if sleep just might be a missing link. Is it true that either racial minorities, low-educated, low-job-security individuals,
people who live in high-risk neighborhoods, who experience fear at night,
are these people who clearly have some sort of social disadvantage,
are they also not sleeping as well? And is this impaired sleep affecting not
only their ability to function the next day, but their longer-term health outcomes?
That is just one of the questions about sleep we will try to answer today.
But because sleep is such a big and interesting topic, and let's face it, it's also kind of weird, the fact that our bodies shut down entirely
for roughly a third of our lives.
Because of all that,
we are actually making two episodes about sleep.
You will hear the second one next week.
And this being Freakonomics,
we ask what the data have to say about sleep.
As you will hear,
even that is not always easy to figure out.
We found that people with more education got more sleep,
and people with higher incomes got more sleep.
The answer is very, very clear.
Those who earn more money per hour, those who have more education, they sleep less. From WNYC Studios, this is Freakonomics Radio,
the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything.
Here's your host, Stephen Dubner.
I don't know about you, but I personally love to sleep.
I look forward to it.
I like how I feel after a good night's sleep.
And therefore, I take my sleep pretty seriously.
You're talking to someone who does sleep with an eye mask and earplugs just so you know and that's because of my schedule for a bunch of years when I was traveling a lot in different time zones
whatever I needed to sleep sometimes on planes or trains or whatever right in a hotel room when I'd
get somewhere and it'd be daytime and so I started using those sleep aids and then I just got used to
them and then they became Pavlovian for me.
So like now, the minute I put in the plugs and the face mask, wherever I am, I just go to sleep.
So I do it even at home. It's just like a habit, which is kind of weird and annoying sometimes to my wife.
Right.
I'm talking here with Lauren Hale, the sleep researcher we heard from earlier, and asking about her sleep preferences.
Now, what about backside
or tummy? I'm a
tummy sleeper.
Hale likes the bedroom dark
and cool, as do I, by the way.
She likes a nice flat pillow, not
too fluffy. I go for medium
fluffy. And Hale, like me,
is married with two kids.
But my kids are 14 and 13. Hers are much
younger. The second one was born just a few months ago, which means that mom is not sleeping as much
as she'd like. I wake up two to three times a night. My youngest one is not yet sleep trained.
And it's very difficult to sleep well when you know you have to feed a child.
So most days, Hale feels exhausted from lack of sleep.
But she knows how lucky she is because her condition is temporary.
As her kids get older, they'll sleep through the night.
I know that my period of disrupted sleep, chronic disrupted sleep, is time-delimited,
where I understand from my research on low-income, high-financial insecurity individuals
that not everybody has that luxury of knowing when they will resume a full night's sleep on a regular basis.
Hale's research is focused on the racial and economic disparities of sleep.
She stumbled on this topic as a graduate student.
Her Ph. Her PhD from Princeton
is in public affairs with a focus on population studies. Hale was trying to understand why some
groups of people are so much healthier than others. The data she was using had a huge hole in it.
I realized that we have data on the social experiences of individuals from childhood to middle age or older ages, and we were looking at what social factors explain health.
And they had an enormous amount of data on these individuals on two-thirds of their lives, the waking hours.
But they didn't have anything on what's going on during that remaining third at night.
That hole looks even bigger when you consider the scientific evidence
on the relationship between sleep and health.
Well, 20 years ago, we didn't know much about that.
David Dinges is a professor of psychology and psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania.
In recent years, he says, researchers have found strong associations between lack of sleep
and all
sorts of medical issues, large and small.
The experimental studies in the laboratory in both animals and humans show unequivocally
that we gain weight fairly fast if we restrict our sleep.
Because sleep is so central to health, Lauren Hale really wanted to find some data that
showed how much and how well people sleep.
And she did.
The CDC regularly conducts the National Health Interview Survey.
One year, the survey happened to ask people about sleep.
I was interested in the sleep disparities present among adults.
And we found these stark differences.
The National Institutes of Health recommends that people get between seven and eight hours of sleep a night.
In the CDC survey, nearly 31 percent of black respondents said they slept less than six hours a day compared to just 23 and a half percent of white respondents.
The black respondents were also, perhaps not coincidentally, more likely to be very poor.
This led Lauren Hale to consider the possibility that blacks and other minorities
are more likely to suffer higher mortality in part because of the short sleep durations.
Generally, people who have more opportunities, more control over their lives, are also better sleepers.
And on the face of it, this would seem to make sense.
You can envision a lot of connections between poverty and sleep, right?
Your home environment might not be as conducive to good sleep.
You're more likely to hold more than one job, maybe have a longer commute.
And financial stress probably doesn't help anyone sleep better.
But let's remember, the CDC survey was a survey. And survey data,
as we've preached around here a lot, can be the lowest form of data.
It's quite difficult to get accurate information about people's routine sleep behavior.
That's Diane Lauderdale. She is an epidemiologist at the University of Chicago.
She says that sleep researchers have been trying
all kinds of ways to get good sleep data. The obvious one is to ask people, how much sleep
do you usually get at night? And that seems like it should be a great way to find out about sleep,
just like if you ask people, how tall are you or how much do you weigh? You get a pretty good
answer. It turns out, though, that sleep is
hard. People don't actually know the answer to that question. We don't come with an internal
clock. And so when people are sleeping, when they wake up, they have no idea usually how much
they've slept. Well, plus, I guess you also don't really know exactly when you fell asleep. I might
have gotten in bed at 11, but I might not get to sleep till 11.25 or something, and I might not be aware of that, right?
Right. Well, you'll know that it took you a while to go to sleep, but you might not be at all good
at estimating how long it was, whether it was five minutes or 40 minutes. In addition, for many
people, routines vary day to day. And so there's not only the problem of not knowing on any one particular
night how much sleep you got, but in answering a question about routine sleep behavior,
not really having a good sense of how to average behaviors over days when in fact you don't know
how much you actually slept on any of them. Indeed, the CDC survey that showed a big sleep
disparity between whites and blacks simply asked people to provide a number for the total hours usually slept during a 24-hour day, including naps.
There's another, even more obvious problem with survey data, Diane Lauderdale points out.
If you want, you can simply make up your answer.
One approach people in surveys unfortunately often resort to is just giving an answer which they think will be a well-accepted answer to the person interviewing them.
A lot of people have heard the eight-hour figure. Where does that come from?
I have tried to figure out where it comes from. I have no idea.
That's a great question. If you have any leads, I'd be delighted to hear them.
On the other hand, some people may have reason to
under-report their sleep. Maybe you are generally unhappy or unwell, and you figure that it's
because you're not sleeping enough. Or maybe you're the kind of person who thinks that sleep
is for suckers. There was a period in the 80s, 90s, when, you know, Margaret Thatcher or Bill Clinton really bragged about
only needing four hours or five hours of sleep.
What I came here tonight to promise you is that I will stay up late and get up early
and work hard as long as it takes to turn this country around and give it back to the
American people. And there was this period when being short sleepers was really held up as evidence that you were leading an important life.
You probably still know plenty of people like that, don't you?
Investment bankers, programmers, anyone working on a startup.
There'll be time to sleep when I'm dead, they say.
They are sleep shaming the rest of us.
But Diane Lauderdale thinks this trend is fading.
I think far fewer people brag about how little they're sleeping.
They're more likely to be complaining about how little they're sleeping and valuing sleep.
This may be because lack of sleep has recently been singled out as a really, really big problem.
Last year, the CDC declared insufficient sleep a public health epidemic.
It cited the long-term health implications and also warned that poor sleep leads to motor vehicle crashes and industrial disasters.
The news media, which never lets a scary story go to waste, has been happy to chime in.
You know, the lack of sleep carries a big price tag.
There is a greater risk of poor health, obesity, accidents, and bad judgment.
Wow, did we scare you there?
Your health can take a serious hit if you're not getting enough sleep.
There's a wide perception that people in the U.S. are sleeping less than they used to,
and the evidence for that is very weak, but it's so commonly
accepted that people at this point say it without referring to data or any reference because people
take it as the truth. In other words, if you ask a simple question like how much does the average
American sleep each night and how much has that amount changed over time, if any? Well, the data to
answer those questions aren't very clean. One commonly cited study, Diane Lauderdale says,
was a survey conducted in 1960 by the American Cancer Society. It had the virtue of being a
large survey, a million people, who were asked about medical history, whether they smoked,
and so on.
They happened to ask people how much they usually slept in that baseline assessment.
This survey concluded that Americans typically slept eight to nine hours a night,
with just 2% of respondents sleeping six or fewer hours a night.
Fast forward now 35 years to 1995, when the National Sleep Foundation did another sleep survey.
The NSF happens to take money from pharmaceutical and mattress companies, but they claim independence and academic rigor.
Lauren Hale, for instance, the sleep researcher at Stony Brook, is on the NSF board.
Anyway, this survey found that nightly sleep had dropped to seven hours. And then in 2007, the CDC survey reported that 30% of American adults were sleeping six or fewer hours.
And these findings were often getting compared with the 1960 data.
People picked up on the distribution of sleep reported from 1960 in that study
as being this baseline of how people slept.
But there's at least one big problem with the American Cancer Society survey.
Volunteers recruited friends and family to participate,
so the sample set wasn't even trying to represent the population as a whole.
There were almost no minority group members in it.
They were well-educated, wealthier than the general population.
So Lauderdale is not buying the argument that we're all sleeping less. In fact,
she says she's found some evidence to suggest that teenagers at least spend more time in bed
than they used to. So that strongly suggests that there's not a big trend towards less sleep.
Lauderdale is also cautious about presuming a concrete link between sleep and health.
The evidence that sleep matters for health, while growing and to some extent pretty compelling,
is not as strong as the evidence that physical activity and diet matter for health. I think we really need to know better how sleep
is related to health. It's absolutely clear that sleep is related in some ways. We just
don't have a lot of clarity about which those are and exactly how it matters.
So what do you do if you want some clarity about sleep
and you don't want to just rely on self-reported data?
In recent years, researchers have turned to something called actigraphy.
That means you attach a small accelerometer to someone's wrist,
think of a Fitbit, and it tracks their arm movements.
So you can get a pretty good estimate of when people are asleep,
but of course it's just just it's an estimate.
But the good thing is it's objective in that it doesn't have all of these reporting problems that the sleep survey questions have.
A few years back, Lauderdale and some colleagues collected their own data on sleep patterns with some of the data collected by wrist actigraphy. This was an add-on to
a larger longitudinal study that years earlier had begun following young healthy adults in
Chicago.
This was done after people had been in the cohort for about 20 years, and they
were enrolled when they were young adults, 18 to 30. So at this point, they were mostly
in their 40s. The population was about half white and half African American,
and that was by design how the study was set up in the 1980s.
They, at one time, had all lived in the Chicago area,
but were not necessarily in the Chicago area anymore.
And there were about 650 people who participated in this sleep add-on study.
The data from this study seemed to confirm the self-reported data that Lauren Hale had
looked at.
What we found was, on average, really large gender and race disparities.
Women, on average, slept about an hour longer than men, and whites slept on average about an hour longer than African-Americans,
so that there was combined almost an hour and a half difference on average between African-American
men and white women, with the white women sleeping more. And the race difference was
extremely surprising because it was so large.
In terms of race, what's the best explanation for why whites slept longer, better than African-Americans?
So some of the difference we found had to do with economic and education factors, but not all of it.
So with this actigraphy estimate, and I'm intentionally highlighting that,
we found that people with more education got more sleep and people with higher incomes got more sleep.
Okay, so based on relatively objective data, it does seem that people with more education and higher incomes get more sleep.
And that whites get more sleep than African-Americans.
That's a nice, clean, bold conclusion, isn't it?
Come on, people, this is Freakonomics Radio.
We're not just going to leave it there, are we?
No, we are not.
Coming up after the break, we talked to an economist who looked at a truly massive data set charting the daily habits of roughly 150,000 Americans.
And he found what seemed to be an opposite conclusion.
You can adjust for anything else you want.
Education, age, marital status, presence of kids, immigrant status.
Blacks sleep more than whites on average.
And how well do sleep researchers follow their own sleep advice?
I admit I use screens at bedtime.
I should not, but screens are enticing and relaxing.
And one more thing before we go to the break.
For this episode, we asked you, our podcast listeners, to tell us about your sleep habits. You responded in great number
and with quite a few, shall we say, unexpected answers, like the sleeping head to feet thing.
Hey guys, I just woke up and I thought I'd send this to you and let you know how I slept.
My name is Matt King and I live in Menifee, California.
Not well, sort of tossed and
turned. I will sleep through earthquakes, lightning storms, the dogs barking, my wife being irritated
for whatever reason. Never had a problem sleeping. My husband's not in town and I never, I never sleep
well when he's not here. My name is David Taylor.
My name is Paul Heinisch.
I live in Campbell River, British Columbia, Canada.
I get anywhere from six to six and a half hours sleep.
And I sleep at the opposite end of my wife's side of the bed, head to feet.
I start out with a weird sleeping pattern that I have to sleep with my feet up where my wife's head is
and my head down there as close to the TV as possible with the TV on the full time.
Hello Freakonomics, this is Mohamed Alsari.
My name is Anne.
I am originally from Saudi Arabia, but I currently live in Scottsdale, Arizona.
I cannot wear socks when I'm sleeping or else I get really thirsty at night.
I usually sleep with two pillows under my head and one pillow, this is important, one pillow between my thighs. I just love that.
I used to smoke a lot of weed before I went to bed, but when you quit cold turkey, you remember your dreams like hardcore, which is really stressful.
I hate remembering my dreams.
My name is Heath Einstein. I am age 39 and I live in Dallas, Texas.
I at least try to get one body part touching, so I'll try to slip my leg underneath my wife's legs. I don't like to be touched while
I'm sleeping, much to my wife's chagrin. No snuggling. There's an imaginary line that I
prefer not to be crossed. It's awesome to wake up with the sun. I prefer a room that is pitch black,
where you can't see even a finger right in front of your face. In order to help get to sleep, I take two melatonin,
a baby aspirin,
and usually
a Bombay Sapphire Martini.
My name is Laura Clem, and I'm from
Colorado, but I now live in
Hong Kong. Nice, fresh, cold pillow,
and you flip it over to the cold side. I always
like that. It helps me fall asleep. Before bed,
I usually get really thirsty, so
I have to take a drink, but then I'll usually get really thirsty, so I have to take a
drink. But then I'll have to pee, so then I have to pee. And then I'm thirsty again, so I'll take
another drink. Then I won't go to bed right away, so I'll have to pee again. It's a vicious cycle.
So that's my story. I guess I better sign off for now so I can go to bed and Get some sleep.
Since we are exploring the causes and consequences of sleep,
we asked to hear about your sleep habits.
I like to think of myself as a bit of a sleep snob.
So we thought we'd ask the same thing of one of the first economists to ever study sleep.
We're getting a little personal here.
That's Dan Hammermesh.
I'm professor of economics at Royal Holloway University of London and emeritus professor at the University of Texas at Austin.
Hammermesh started studying sleep in the late 1980s,
in part because he wasn't getting enough.
I've always viewed myself as a pretty bad sleeper.
Some nights he'll sleep for eight hours, but then only six the next. His wife worries about him. She won't let him work
past 9 p.m., so he tends to get into bed pretty early. I've been married for 48 and a half years.
I like to sleep on my left side. I insist on being on the right side of the bed. I sleep on my left
side and cuddle up to my wife who's sleeping on her left side. If I'm by myself in a hotel, as I am occasionally, I sleep on my left side and I hug a pillow in place of my wife.
When he's not hugging his pillow or his wife, Hammer Mesh likes to crunch data.
He's a big fan of the American Time Use Survey, which is produced
by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. It covers roughly 150,000 people. But unlike the typical
survey, which just asks people to say how much time they spend doing a particular activity,
sleeping or doing housework or whatever, the American Time Use Survey asks them to account for every minute out of all 24
hours. This is meant to lessen the bias against particular activities. I think it's a wonderful
thing. They started this in 2003. It is by now the world's largest ongoing, indeed the only ongoing
continuing study of how people spend their time. A tremendous revolution in data for people like myself.
When we asked him, Hammer Mesh was good enough to look into the sleep numbers from the ATU.
Is it ATUS or ATUS?
There's a discussion of this among those who produce it.
They like to say ATUS.
My time is more valuable.
I say ATUS.
Okay.
So what do the ATUS data tell us about sleep?
Well, it tells us what you expect.
Namely, the average person sleeps somewhere between eight and nine hours.
So that's pretty much what you think.
All right.
Any variance by gender?
Well, we know that women on average sleep about eight minutes more per night than do men,
which is not a heck of a lot, but it
adds to an hour a week. That's the first thing. But that gender gap changes when you throw a baby
into the equation. Among people who have little kids, ages zero through two, for men, that results
in about eight minutes per night of reduced sleep compared to other men who have no kids,
whereas among women, it results in 16 minutes per night, almost close to two hours per week
of reduced sleep. So despite the alleged great efforts that men are making these days to increase
equalization of behavior in the household, in fact, sleep reductions are much bigger among women than
among men who have little kids. Hammermesh found the same result in the data from 1975,
so it would seem that not much has changed. By the way, married men and women both sleep about
eight minutes less per night than their single counterparts. And since we're talking about
American sleep habits, how do people born
in the U.S. sleep compared to immigrants? Immigrants sleep more given their education,
their age, their gender, number of kids, marital status. And that's especially true for male
immigrants. For men, it's 20 to 25 more per night, which is a huge amount. That's 20 to 25 minutes per night, which does suggest that America tends to be a bit more sleepless than the rest of the world.
But let's get back to what we're here for, to look at differences between high and low income sleepers and how those differences might influence something as important as life-threatening disease. Remember, the other data we've been discussing has all suggested that higher-income, higher-education people sleep more than low-income, low-education people.
What does this ADIS data have to say? The answer is very, very clear. Those who earn more money
per hour, who have better what we call an economics opportunity cost of working,
they sleep less. Those who have more education,
because education increases your opportunities in the labor market, one should expect and one
observes that the more educated you are, the less you sleep given your demographics of age,
ethnicity, marital status, and presence of kids. It doesn't differ much between college dropouts
and people with PhDs. The big difference
is between those who have some college or more compared to high school grads or high school
dropouts. And we're talking 15, 20 minutes for men per night, which is a lot. I mean, that's
a couple hours out of your 168 per week. That's a substantial amount.
And what about the black-white sleep gap?
Again, the other data suggested that blacks sleep less than whites. Hammermesh says that's wrong.
You can adjust for anything else you want. Education, age, marital status, presence of
kids, immigrant status. Blacks sleep more than whites on average. It would seem that on average
that is true. The ATIS data show that black men, for instance,
sleep eight or nine minutes more per night than white men.
For women, the gap is even wider.
Black women sleep roughly 20 minutes more than white women.
But Lauren Hale, the sleep researcher we heard from earlier,
says that average sleep duration is not the key metric.
What you want to do, she says, is break down the ATIS data further.
You want to look at people who sleep fewer than six hours a night,
short sleepers, as researchers call them, and also the very long sleepers.
Dan Hammermesh was focusing on the averages.
I think he's wrong because I've looked at the data
and I think you have to separate out who are the short sleepers and who are the long sleepers.
So we went back to Dan Hammermesh, asked him to get on his computer again, and rerun the regression.
Let me just look at this for a second if I could. Okay.
He found something he wasn't expecting.
The average black, be it male or female, is more likely to sleep very short hours, less than six
hours per night. Also, much more likely to sleep very long hours, more than 11 hours a night.
In other words, they're more extreme sleep by blacks than by whites, both very short sleep
and especially very long sleep. And that's a new finding. I'd not seen that before.
The fact seems incontrovertible and really neat.
Really neat, meaning really persuasive and useful if you're trying to connect sleep to overall health.
Sleeping too little or too much, we should say, are both associated with poor health.
And one more thing. While the ATIS data do argue that high earners sleep less than low earners, the University of Chicago epidemiologist Diane Lauderdale says that conclusion is also tricky.
What I believe is going on is that people with more money spend less time in bed or a lot less time to sleep,
but they spend a higher proportion of the time they do a lot actually sleeping.
So they're more efficient in bed.
Exactly.
Efficient sleeping, I should say.
They may be more efficient in bed in every way, but they're more efficient sleeping in
bed.
Yes.
I'm not discussing that.
So that may have to do with just overall how they think about their time, because their
time is worth more.
We circled back to Sherman James, the Emory epidemiologist who studies the black-white
health gap. We asked what he thought of the possibility that sleep might be a missing link.
He said he never thought of it, but it does seem plausible. He pointed out that our
blood pressure drops to a nice baseline level when we sleep, sort of an opportunity for the
cardiovascular system to rest. But for African Americans, he says, blood pressure doesn't dip
quite as much at night as it does for whites. And so what we're looking at then is a reduced
ability of the cardiovascular system to recover. And that's going to have effects.
If one's blood pressure is higher even while you are sleeping,
then that's going to add to your long-term risk for heart disease.
Lauren Hale from Stony Brook believes the racial sleep gap may be driven in part by environmental factors.
African Americans are more likely to be poor and live in a neighborhood that is not optimized for sleeping.
The high-risk neighborhood is noisier.
The apartments are crowded.
The apartments aren't as well air-conditioned or heated because it's a low-income household.
There is more light outside on the street.
There's an airplane flying overhead.
There's a street brawl going on outside.
Maybe it's something about
being in that neighborhood. So what if you take that person out of the neighborhood and see how
they sleep in the country or in the suburbs? Would their sleep improve? We haven't done that
experiment. But the question is, well, is it really living in a high-risk neighborhood that's
the problem? Or is it more of a compositional problem of who lives in a high-risk neighborhood?
And who lives in a high-risk neighborhood? but the same type of people we've already reported, are at higher risk of poor sleep?
Hale is currently doing research with a project called the Fragile Families and Child Well-Being Study.
It's following nearly 5,000 kids born in the U.S. between 1998 and 2000, most of them to unwed parents.
Now the kids are teenagers, and Hale's team is using wrist actigraphy to track their sleep.
What we can tell from looking at the earlier waves of data is that as early as ages 3 and 5, and even at 9 too,
we're finding that black children are sleeping less than white children. They're also
having fewer bedtimes and fewer bedtime routines, and they're less likely to use the bedtimes.
And so early on, these parenting differences around bedtime might have lasting impacts.
At age five, we in particular looked at cognitive outcomes and behavioral outcomes.
And most strongly, we found that cognitive outcomes were higher among children who had a regular language-based bedtime routine, reading a story or singing a song. talking to us about nutrition and safe driving and anti-alcohol and anti-drug and anti-smoking.
But I've never seen, that I can recall, a pro-sleep message, really.
Why is that or why haven't we seen that?
Is it because it's not really that important or just because we haven't collectively come to appreciate the power of good sleep on a productive life?
I think you're absolutely right.
Sleep has not yet been fully recognized
as an important health behavior. The Centers for Disease Control has every decade a set of goals
for the health of the nation. And it wasn't until the 2020 initiative that sleep made the list of
what we should aspire to as a country. And to the sleep community, that seems ludicrous.
We're like, it's obvious that sleep is essential for not just cognitive well-being,
but for heart health, for psychological well-being, for interpersonal relationships.
So unlike in the case of smoking, which is a huge public health success story,
where you can say we know smoking is bad for one's health.
The recommendation is to quit smoking.
There wasn't a clear recommendation on what duration and quality of sleep was expected.
So it's more nuanced.
The National Sleep Foundation and others have issued a menu of sleep hygiene recommendations. Some of them
are pretty obvious. You want to avoid caffeine, nicotine, and alcohol too close to bedtime.
Alcohol may help you fall asleep, but the quality of sleep is reduced.
The guidelines also suggest exercise, creating a regular bedtime routine,
and avoiding screens of all sorts from at least 30 minutes before you sleep.
Lauren Hale, even though she is a bona fide sleep researcher and is on the board of the National Sleep Foundation, says she has a hard time with that last one.
I admit I use screens at bedtime. I should not. But screens are enticing and relaxing
in some ways, even though the research shows that the light and the content from
reading a screen in bed or at bedtime are not conducive to sleep.
And how persuasive is that research in your mind?
It is on the brink of becoming even more persuasive. But in December, Anne-Marie Chang
and Chuck Seisler at Harvard published an experimental study where they kept people
in a laboratory at night. Some people were reading the same content on a book and some
people were reading it on an iPad. And those people who read it on an iPad were shown the
light. I mean, they had exposure to the light and had trouble falling asleep in lower quality sleep.
So it's persuasive. So you say you do use some screens. Do you use
screens for reading, watching TV? What do you do? I would say probably before children and before I
had an iPad, I would watch TV at night. Now I look at my phone or I look at an iPad.
And what are you looking for? When you say I look at, what are you looking for?
I read.
Okay. You read like books? Are you reading emails and Instagram and Facebook?
Yeah, something like that. Emails. I respond to email or I for me at least, and this is just an N of one, that that would be way more disruptive or distracting to sleep than reading an actual book.
Because when I read a book, I'm reading it kind of for pleasure and also to learn.
Right.
And I'm focused.
And it doesn't distract me in a way that like seeing, oh, that's what that person is up to.
And I wonder what that means for me and my family and my life.
And oh, my goodness, so-and-so went to Antarctica. I wonder if they're going to bring me back some
frozen penguin poo as a gift. Wouldn't that be great? And so when you say that it's just light
stuff, see, to me, and again, to my untrained brain, I would think that's the worst thing
you could possibly do. You're completely winning in this argument. I should not be reading my iPhone before bed.
You're inspiring me to take my own advice and try it for a week.
Put the screens down.
I did a screen-free week last year, actually, with my kids.
At that point, one kid.
It wasn't that hard.
But I think the real challenge is try it for a week and see if you feel better,
if you're sleeping more, if you're going to bed earlier and see how you feel.
Okay. So I want to make this concrete. So are you saying right here and right now that you vow
from today going forward for one week that you're going to do what? That you're going to put all
your screens outside of the bedroom at a certain time, let's say? Is that what you're offering? Absolutely.
Okay, what time?
From 9 o'clock onwards.
Of course, I have a little baby who falls asleep at 7, so I try to fall asleep even sooner.
But yes, from 9 o'clock onwards, including when I'm up in the middle of the night nursing,
I vow not to look at my iPhone, my smartphone, or my television until seven in the morning.
Awesome. Okay. So here's what's going to happen. We're going to get you back on the line in a week.
Okay.
And we want to know what happened. And we want to then know, obviously, if what you learned about
yourself might inform somehow where you want to go down the road for future sleep research. Does
that sound okay?
Okay. That sounds fantastic.
All right. Talk to you then.
Talk to you then.
Okay.
Bye-bye.
Thanks so much, Lauren.
Bye-bye.
Okay.
That's our sleep cliffhanger.
Will Lauren Hale be able to put away all her devices before bedtime for a whole week?
Next episode, you'll hear.
I was shocked at how many times I wanted to check my phone, turn on the TV,
go to the computer. But also next episode, does sleeping more help you earn more money?
We find that permanently increasing sleep by an hour per week for everybody in a city increases
the wages in that location by about four and a half percent. And we hear more from you, our listeners, on how you optimize your sleep.
My name is Spencer Rothfuss. I am 16 years old and live in Omaha, Nebraska.
I sleep fully dressed in the next day's clothes, so I'm ready to go in the morning.
And finally, scientific proof that the early bird really does get the worm.
There was a significant differential in the sense that the morning-type people
earns 4 or 5 percent more than evening-type people.
All of that next time on Freakonomics Radio.
Freakonomics Radio is produced by WNYC Studios and Dubner Productions.
This episode was produced by Christopher Wirth.
It was mixed by Rick Kwan and Merit Jacob.
Our staff also includes Irva Gunja, Jake Howitt, Greg Rosalski,
Kasia Mihailovic, Alison Hockenberry, and Caroline English.
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