Is sleep the key to health? A revolutionary new book on natural body rhythms reveals how the way we sleep affects our weight, our relationships and our decision-making.
Secrets of human body clock revealed
Is sleep the key to health? A revolutionary new book on natural body rhythms reveals how the way we sleep affects our weight, our relationships and our decision-making.
Tina turned on the light. It was 2am, but she was not sleepy. She reached for her phone to check her messages. Then she went to the kitchen and poured herself a large bowl of cerealFoster recommends a light evening meal and warns against late-night snacks.. Then she went back to bed and started watching Friends.
According to Russell Foster, head of Oxford University's Sleep and CircadianThe term is made up of two Latin words meaning approximately and a day. Neuroscience Institute, these the worst things she could do - his new book explains why.
All of us have a body clock. It controls every aspect of our lives. Whether we function efficiently depends largely on our ability to work in harmony with this cycle.
"We need the correct materials in the right place, in the right amount, at the right time of day," Foster writes. "Thousands of genes must be switched on and off in a specific order."
"Proteins, enzymes, fats, carbohydrates, hormones and other compounds have to be absorbed, broken down, metabolised and produced at a precise time for growth, reproduction, metabolism, movement, memory formation, defence and tissue repair... without precise regulation by an internal clock, our entire system would be in chaos."
Night is above all a time for repair. Aspirin works better if taken before bed. Children with cancer do better if given chemotherapy in the evening.
Increased sleep can counter obesity and diabetes. People deprived of it tend to eat more because their bodies produce extra ghrelin - the hormone that makes us hungry. A study found that sleeping for an extra hour and a quarter helped overweight people consume up to 500 fewer calories a day.
Today, we live in a 24/7 society. It encourages the idea that we can do anything whenever we want. It also depends on many people working through the nightIn the UK, three million people do night shifts.. But 97% of night workers never never get enough sleep.
The consequences are alarming. Sleep loss has been linked to hundreds of thousands of road accidents, as well as major disasters such as those at ChernobylThe disaster, in 1986, involved a meltdown at a nuclear plant in Ukraine. and BhopalA gas leak from a pesticide plant in the Indian city killed over 2,000 people..
Night workers are more vulnerable to disease since our white blood cells - which attack invaders - are most active during the day.
According to a book, Generation Sleepless, the most sleep-deprived people are teenagers. They need nine to ten hoursA study found that only 30% of secondary school pupils managed this on most nights. of sleep - yet in the US they average just six and a half.
<h5 class=" eplus-wrapper">Is sleep the key to health?</h5>
Yes: Our bodies work on a timetable and need time to recover and regenerate. If we do not get enough sleep, all manner of things start to go wrong. We are also likely to make dangerously bad decisions.
No: It is just one of several factors. Eating properly, taking exercise and avoiding smoking and too much alcohol are equally important. Many high-functioning people get by on very little sleep.
Or... If it is, nature has got things badly wrong. There is not much point in life if you spend a large proportion of it unconscious. Our human destiny is to achieve things, not just to snooze.
Large bowl of cereal - Foster recommends a light evening meal and warns against late-night snacks.
Circadian - The term is made up of two Latin words meaning approximately and a day.
Working through the night - In the UK, three million people do night shifts.
Chernobyl - The disaster, in 1986, involved a meltdown at a nuclear plant in Ukraine.
Bhopal - A gas leak from a pesticide plant in the Indian city killed over 2,000 people.
Nine to ten hours - A study found that only 30% of secondary school pupils managed this on most nights.
Secrets of human body clock revealed
Glossary
Large bowl of cereal - Foster recommends a light evening meal and warns against late-night snacks.
Circadian - The term is made up of two Latin words meaning approximately and a day.
Working through the night - In the UK, three million people do night shifts.
Chernobyl - The disaster, in 1986, involved a meltdown at a nuclear plant in Ukraine.
Bhopal - A gas leak from a pesticide plant in the Indian city killed over 2,000 people.
Nine to ten hours - A study found that only 30% of secondary school pupils managed this on most nights.