Sunday, 8 February 2026

Many people sleep worse in winter. Here's what experts want you to know

  • From businessinsider.com
  • Winter insomnia affects sleep quality during colder months.
  • Causes include reduced daylight and stress from the holiday season.
  • Bright light exposure and light therapy can help manage symptoms.

It's normal to feel sluggish during the winter. Cold temperatures and fewer hours of sunlight can mean less time outdoors and more time staring at our screens. 

For some people, these cold-weather habits may contribute to a sleep disruption, known as winter insomnia. This isn't a clinical condition, but it might begin or worsen during the winter months.

"Although disturbances can vary, people commonly experience an increase in middle-of-the-night awakenings, waking up earlier than intended, difficulty falling asleep, or restless sleep," Dr. Nicole Moshfegh, PsyD, clinical psychologist and director of We Rise Psychology, Inc., told Business Insider. She explained that winter insomnia can be caused by a change in your mood or energy level, which affects your ability to unwind before bed or calm your mind when you wake up during the night.

Below, we talked to sleep experts about the signs of winter insomnia, what makes it worse, and what you can do if it's affecting your ability to get a good night's rest.

                                                                                                          Filmstax/Getty Images

Are you experiencing winter insomnia?

Most adults need seven to nine hours of sleep for optimal health. But it's easy to overlook the quality of your sleep or how long it takes for you to fall asleep.

"People who experience winter insomnia have trouble falling and staying asleep, or getting restful sleep during the winter months," Dr. Raj Dasgupta, chief medical advisor for Sleepopolis, told Business Insider. "They usually notice more night-time awakenings, lighter sleep, or a shift in their sleep timing."

He explained that winter insomnia is not a formal diagnosis. Instead, it's "a seasonal pattern of insomnia symptoms most likely from changes in light exposure, routine, and behaviour during winter," he added.

Dr. Jade Wu, a board-certified sleep psychologist and Mattress Firm sleep advisor, agreed, saying there are no clinical signs to differentiate winter insomnia from other types of insomnia you might experience throughout the year.

"In some ways, it's easier to have insomnia in the summer due to the longer daylight late into the evening hours, which stimulates our circadian alerting signals," she said. These signals tell us when to wake up and be alert.

"But in winter, people are more likely to be sedentary and not have enough light exposure, so this can make them more vulnerable to insomnia and circadian problems," she said. Another factor contributing to poor sleep is our eating habits, such as reaching for certain foods out of comfort or convenience.

Causes of winter insomnia

"With reduced daylight, we have less outside signalling for our brains to know when it's day versus night, which can cause our circadian rhythms to become less strong or stable," Wu explained. "A less stable circadian rhythm can disrupt sleep quality."

Some people try to compensate for the lack of sunlight by relying on bright indoor lighting, which leads to greater alertness in the evening and difficulty falling asleep. "Over time, these shifts can disrupt the circadian rhythm and make sleep timing feel less predictable," Moshfegh said.

Less exposure to natural light, especially in the morning, may also contribute to seasonal mood changes, such as anxiety, depression, or seasonal affective disorder (SAD), Dasgupta noted. Signs of SAD include feeling depressed or being unable to find pleasure in previously enjoyable activities.

"Depression includes many physical symptoms like fatigue, sluggishness, and changes in appetite and sleep," Wu said. You may also notice mental symptoms, such as reduced motivation or difficulty concentrating.

"Because sleep and mood have a bidirectional relationship, the lower our mood, the more we experience sleep disturbances and vice versa," Moshfegh said. Both she and Dasgupta emphasized that the stress of the holiday season, combined with irregular schedules, increased alcohol use, and cold and flu season, can get in the way of healthy habits like exercising or cutting down on takeout orders.

"Many people experience increased loneliness, family challenges, grief, and pressure around goals and self-improvement during this time of year," Moshfegh said. "These experiences can all cause and contribute to stress, which is one of the most potent disruptors of sleep."

How to cope with winter insomnia

There are several ways to minimize sleep disruptions. "The most powerful tool we have is bright light exposure, which means being outdoors and being near brighter windows when you have to be indoors," Wu said.

If clouds are in the forecast or you work in low-light conditions, one option is to use a bright light therapy light box. "Make sure to check with your doctor before using a light box, because it can cause significant problems for some people," she said.

https://www.businessinsider.com/winter-insomnia-signs-causes-how-to-sleep-better-2026-2

Friday, 6 February 2026

From doomscrolling to poor sleep: Areas that could lead to cognitive decline identified

From digitaljournal.com

A February 2026 report on risk-increasing behaviour among young adults identified doomscrolling and AI’s cognitive offloading as the habits that can severely increase brain aging. 

These findings come from the industry group Ben’s Natural Health, who have documented behavioural trends among young adults and assessed their potential health and psychological risks.

The key findings from the review are:

  • Doomscrolling increases the chances of insomnia by 59%, while sleep deprivation is linked to a higher risk of dementia.
  • The faster cognitive decline is connected to the diet based on ultra-processed foods and high reliance on fast food and sugary drinks.
  • Chronic urban exposure to air and noise pollution can lead to a 14% increase in dementia risks. 

What exactly are these common habits and how do they accelerate brain aging, possibly increasing the risk of dementia and other related illnesses?


Using phones a lot, especially before bedtime, can hurt sleep quality, and poor sleep on its own can make attention, memory, and decision-making worse. — © AFP Nelson ALMEIDA

‘Revenge’ Bedtime Scrolling or Doomscrolling

‘Revenge’ social media scrolling in bed is very common now, as people try to catch up on the missed relaxation time, but the long-term effects of this habit carry significant risk. Each hour spent staring at screens in bed increases the likelihood of insomnia by 59% and leads to less sleep overall. These hours catch up fast, upping the chances of dementia in the future.

Chronic insomnia and cognitive decline share a bidirectional relationship, where poor sleep accelerates cognitive impairment, and cognitive decline can worsen sleep.

The full impact is:

  • Insomnia risk increase: 59%
  • Less sleep: 24 minutes on average
  • Long-term effects: increased dementia risk

AI Cognitive Offloading

While making AI write first drafts, schedules, and even big decisions saves time, experts warn that the constant habit of it reduces critical thinking skills. Evidence suggests that over-reliance on Artificial Intelligence (AI) can lead to a form of cognitive decline, often referred to as “cognitive atrophy,” particularly affecting critical thinking, memory retention, and problem-solving skills.

Without the routine problem-solving that AI presence removes, the human brain doesn’t get enough activity that can lead to a faster cognitive decline.

Sitting All Day

Even when paired with gym and regular exercise, sedentary behaviour increases dementia risks by 17% on average. Long sitting coupled with TV-viewing almost doubles the chances, increasing them to 31%.

Ultra-Processed Foods (UPF) as the Default Diet 

A large study of almost 11,000 adults found the link between UPF consumption and executive function decline. Impaired executive function means difficulty with cognitive skills that control planning, organizing, decision-making, and emotional regulation, leading to struggles with daily tasks like starting projects, managing time, staying focused, controlling impulses, and adapting to changes.

Fast food, sugary drinks, and packaged snacks are rich in UPF ingredients, and eating them daily affects not only people’s stomachs but also the blood vessels in their brains.

Chronic Urban Exposure

The urban environment is an unavoidable reality for millions of people, but it also affects dementia risks every day. Systematic reviews of medical studies found that both noise and light pollution are connected to raised dementia risks, and constant noise exposure to traffic increases it by around 14%.

Undertreated Hearing Loss

With modern technology able to raise the sound volume to almost any level, many adults miss the first signs of hearing loss. Without assessment, risks increase fast, and hearing intervention slows the cognitive decline (by up to 48% in just 3 years).

https://www.digitaljournal.com/life/from-doomscrolling-to-poor-sleep-areas-that-could-lead-to-cognitive-decline-identified/article 

Thursday, 5 February 2026

Experts reveal the ancient wellbeing practice proven to help fight insomnia during menopause — and how to do it

From tomsguide.com

By Frances Daniels

The benefits are massive for better sleep in older adults 

Major hormonal changes and sleep do not mix well, and one of the biggest changes a woman can face is menopause.

While there are many symptoms of menopause, trouble sleeping is one of the most common. For some women, menopause insomnia can be caused or worsened by night sweats, hot flashes, and nocturia. For others, the triggers aren't so clear cut.

A headshot of Dr Audrey Wells
Dr Audrey Wells

Dr Audrey Wells is the Chief Medical Officer of SLIIP, a healthcare company that offers sleep consultations online via video. Dr Wells is board-certified in sleep medicine and is an advocate for woman's sleep health.

A headshot of Dr Alyssa Dweck
Dr Alyssa Dweck

Dr. Alyssa Dweck is a board-certified gynaecologist. She is a certified menopause provider and serves as the Chief Medical Officer at Bonafide Health.

A headshsot of Dr Michelle Sands.
Dr Michelle Sands

Dr. Michelle Sands is a licensed naturopathic physician (ND) and is board-certified in anti-aging medicine. She specializes in women' health, particularly female hormones. She is the founder and CEO of Glow Natural Wellness.

How Tai Chi reduces insomnia during menopause

Many women's health experts endorse Tai Chi for its low intensity, accessibility, and stress relief. As Dr Alyssa Dweck explains, other studies prove that mind-body exercises such as Tai Chi positively influences sleep quality during menopause.

"Mind body exercises can improve sleep through reducing anxiety and depression, both of which are related to menopause and related sleep disruption," says Dr Dweck.

"This practice, including Tai Chi, decreases fatigue which may help regulate sleep-wake cycles."

A mature menopausal woman practices Tai Chi outdoors.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Tai Chi doesn't cause cortisol spikes

According to the Dr Dweck, another plus is Tai Chi's suitability for middle and older-aged adult, even among those with a lower fitness level.

'Instead of asking women to sit still and 'empty their minds', which rarely works when hormones are shifting, it gives the brain something gentle and rhythmic to focus on'

Dr Michelle Sands, women's health specialist

Dr Michelle Sands, a women's health specialist at Glow Natural Wellness, agrees. "Unlike high-intensity workouts, tai chi doesn’t spike cortisol. For many women in midlife, late-day intense exercise actually worsens insomnia.

"Tai chi supports movement, circulation, and relaxation without overstimulating the system."

Accessibility isn't the only benefit that comes from the martial art's low intensity; its gentleness also helps to ease the common menopausal symptoms of night-time anxiety and frequent wakings.

"The slow, intentional movements combined with steady breathing signal safety to the nervous system," says Dr Sands.

"Instead of asking women to sit still and 'empty their minds', which rarely works when hormones are shifting, it gives the brain something gentle and rhythmic to focus on."

An instructor shows a mature woman how to practice Tai Chi on a hillside.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Sleep experts are highlighting the positive effects on menopause insomnia too. Board-certified sleep doctor at Sliiip Dr Audrey Wells explains that menopause increases activity in the sympathetic nervous system (which triggers fight-or-flight response). Tai Chi heightens the parasympathetic system (which calms the body after stress).

According to Dr Wells: "Tai Chi combines slow movement, breath regulation, and focused attention, which lowers cortisol, improves parasympathetic tone, and reduces cognitive and physical hyperarousal, all major drivers of menopausal insomnia."

The longterm sleep benefits of Tai Chi

Dr Dweck tells us there's plenty of long-term sleep benefits to practicing Tai Chi, such as educed anxiety and depression, as well as more indirect positive results.

"If sleep is improved, downstream effects can be associated with reduced risk of heart disease, cognitive decline and general well being," she points out.

Long lasting results

However, benefits aren't always instant as the study shows that Tai Chi was initially an inferior method to CBT-I at managing insomnia, but non-inferior after 15 months of practice. So why did it become more effective after a year's worth of practice?

According to Certified Menopause Coach at Cape Concierge Physical Therapy Kara McKeown, unlocking all the sleep benefits of Tai Chi requires consistency.

"The longer you practice Tai chi, the easier it becomes to enter the meditative state that it can induce," she explains.

"You can get the benefits in a shorter period of time and the results are long lasting. While the insomnia study itself was only for a 12 week period, the benefits remained at a 24-month follow up."

A woman sleeping on her side wearing an eye mask

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Dr Sands agrees. "Over time, consistent practice improves sleep quality, stress resilience, balance, and overall body awareness," she says.

"Chronic insomnia is rarely just a sleep problem—it’s a whole-body stress pattern. Tai chi helps unwind that pattern over months, not just nights."

According to Dr Sands and McKeown, long-term advantages are also seen because of a very simple reason: People stick with Tai Chi.

"It’s low-impact, accessible, and doesn’t punish your joints or nervous system," says Dr Sands.

"It is sustainable for most people in that it doesn't require much for space or equipment and is cost effective," McKeown explains. "Once the techniques are learned, they can be performed without being in a class or with an instructor."

Effective, but not a complete solution for all

While Dr Wells agrees that Tai Chi is an excellent foundation for many people with menopause, it's not a "complete solution" for everyone as some symptoms can be too severe for Tai Chi to treat alone.

"Tai Chi works best as part of a layered approach rather than a standalone fix," the sleep doctor says.

"Women with severe insomnia, untreated sleep apnoea, significant depression or anxiety, trauma-related sleep disruption, or intense hot flashes may also need CBT-I, targeted medical treatment, or hormone therapy."

How to practice Tai Chi to manage insomnia during menopause

A head shot of Dr Mao Shing Ni.
Dr. Mao Shing Ni

Dr. Mao Shing Ni (Dr Mao) is a doctor of Chinese medicine, and a Tai Chi master and instructor who has authored books on Harmony Tai Chi and managing menopause symptoms.

If you're thinking of using Tai Chi to help ease menopause insomnia but aren't sure where to start, we've called upon Dr. Maoshing Ni, a Tai Chi master and author of exercise program Dr. Mao's Harmony Tai Chi: Simple Practice for Health and Well-Being to answer some common questions.

First of all, what exactly is Tai Chi? "Tai Chi is a traditional Chinese mind–body practice based on the Taoist principles of balance, flow and harmony," says Dr Mao.

"It combines slow, flowing movements with breath and focused awareness."

However, he explains that some forms of Tai Chi, such as the physically-demanding, martial arts-oriented styles, are not suited for menopause-related fatigue and insomnia.

A mature woman practices Tai Chi next to a serene lake.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Choosing the right Tai Chi practice for menopause

"Practices that emphasize slow transitions, soft joints, and coordinated breathing—rather than strength or martial precision—are ideal during times of hormonal fluctuation," he advises.

"For example, Harmony Style Tai Chi combines the best of Chen, Yang and Wu for health and balance."

To get the sleep-boosting benefits of Tai Chi, Dr Mao recommends practicing in the morning or late afternoon, up to fours before bedtime.

"This timing helps discharge stress, regulate cortisol, and transition the body into parasympathetic (rest-and-digest) mode without overstimulating the system right before sleep," he suggests.

Dr. Mao’s Harmony Tai Chi online video instruction is tailored towards fatigued days and menopause symptoms. It integrates Traditional Chinese Medicine principles with accessible movement for improving sleep naturally.

Another natural method that Dr Mao recommends to ease menopause insomnia is guided meditation.

"Train the mind to let go of words, thoughts, and images as you consciously welcome inner awareness and the stillness of deep sleep."

How to improve sleep during menopause

As Dr Wells mentions above, Tai Chi is beneficial but not a one-size-fits-all solution for menopause insomnia. "In menopause, sleep improves when the environment supports cooling, predictability, and nervous system safety."

"That means keeping your bedroom cool and dark, using breathable bedding, avoiding alcohol close to bedtime, maintaining consistent sleep and wake times, and getting morning daylight exposure."

Dr Wells still thinks Tai Chi is an invaluable way to treat the sleep challenges that come with menopause, though.

"Regular movement, stress-reducing practices like Tai Chi or yoga, and addressing hot flashes or sleep apnoea medically are just as important as traditional ‘sleep hygiene’ tips."

https://www.tomsguide.com/wellness/sleep/experts-reveal-the-ancient-wellbeing-practice-proven-to-help-fight-insomnia-during-menopause-and-how-to-do-it