Saturday 19 November 2016

Smartphones cause insomnia, study finds

From networkworld.com

Put that smartphone away or limit your use of it if you want to get a decent night’s sleep and stay healthy.
Researchers from the University of California, San Francisco say they have confirmed that sleep deprivation is magnified by exposure to a kind of blue light emitted by the devices. And missing sleep can instigate deadly diseases, such as obesity and depression.
“Longer average screen-time was associated with shorter sleep duration and worse sleep-efficiency,” the journal PLOS ONE says of the research on its website.
Sleep took longer to come on and quality was generally poor, according to the researchers.
Over 600 participants were studied over 30-day periods, and researchers overwhelmingly found that the more people used their smartphones, particularly just before bed, the worse sleep was for them.
The problem is that blue light spectrum—as is produced by smartphones—can suppress the body’s creation of melatonin. That leads to “decreased drowsiness, difficulty initiating sleep and non-restorative sleep,” the researchers say.

Smartphones disrupt melatonin production

Melatonin is a hormone produced by the brain’s pineal gland; it triggers the body’s natural rhythms. Light is part of what regulates melatonin in the body. As the body produces melatonin, the body’s sleep rhythm kicks in. That’s interrupted by the phones.
Those sleep issues might not be a major problem if it weren't for the fact that sleep deprivation has been linked as a risk factor for morbid diseases, such as obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, depression and overall mortality.
In other words, messing around with your smartphone, particularly when your body is preparing to be asleep, might contribute to tiredness, if not kill you. It might not be your partner’s snoring or inconsiderate neighbours slamming doors that’s really affecting your sleep, but your use of the phone.
“Longer average screen-time was associated with shorter duration of sleep and reduced sleep efficiency,” the researchers say.

Sometimes smartphones and blue light are good

Some people say smartphones and blue light aren't all bad. The Daily Mail, in its coverage of the blue-light study, points out that researchers at Mid Sweden University have discovered that mixing blue light with caffeine intake makes the brain more alert.
“It has the potential to positively influence a range of settings where cognitive function and alertness are important,” the researchers say in the Daily Mail article.

http://www.networkworld.com/article/3141938/mobile-wireless/smartphones-cause-insomnia-study-finds.html

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