Thursday, May 2, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Just 16-Minute Sleep Loss Daily Can Hamper Your Job

Darpan News Desk IANS, 24 Apr, 2019 06:58 PM
  • Just 16-Minute Sleep Loss Daily Can Hamper Your Job

Losing just 16 minutes of sleep during working days can greatly hamper your performance at the workplace, say researchers.


University of South Florida (USF) researchers, in a paper published in the journal Sleep Health, noted that workers are more likely to have poor judgment and fall "off-task" the next day if they lose even minimal on sleep.


"Findings from this study provide empirical evidence for why workplaces need to make more efforts to promote their employees' sleep," said lead author Soomi Lee, assistant professor from the School of Aging Studies at the university.


To reach this conclusion, Lee and her colleagues surveyed 130 healthy employees who work in IT and have at least one school-going child.


Participants reported that when they slept 16 minutes less than usual and had worse quality sleep, they experienced more cognitive issues the next day.


That raised their stress levels, especially regarding issues related to work-life balance, resulting in them going to bed earlier and waking up earlier due to fatigue.


"Good sleepers may be better performers at work due to greater ability to stay focused on-task with fewer errors and interpersonal conflicts," Lee noted, stressing that sleep loss could be the difference between a clear-headed day at the office or one filled with distractions.


The cyclical associations reflect that employees' sleep is vulnerable to daily cognitive stress and also a contributor to cognitively stressful experiences, Lee added.


Researchers also compared work-days to weekends.


They found that the consequences of less sleep are not as apparent when one has the next day off from work.

MORE Life ARTICLES

Singing, Gardening In Middle Age May Lower Dementia Risk

Singing, Gardening In Middle Age May Lower Dementia Risk
Keeping physically and mentally active in middle age may lower the risk of developing dementia decades later, a study claims.

Singing, Gardening In Middle Age May Lower Dementia Risk

Push-Ups Can Keep Heart Disease Risk At Bay: Study

Push-Ups Can Keep Heart Disease Risk At Bay: Study
Active, middle-aged men who can complete more than 40 push-ups at a time had a significantly lower risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes compared to those who did less than 10 push-ups, says a new study.

Push-Ups Can Keep Heart Disease Risk At Bay: Study

Women Should Be Offered Treatment Options For Miscarriage: Study

Women Should Be Offered Treatment Options For Miscarriage: Study
Miscarriage is the most common complication of pregnancy and affects an estimated one in four pregnancies.

Women Should Be Offered Treatment Options For Miscarriage: Study

Dressing Tips For Valentine’s Day Date

Opt for flirty ankle strap heels or playful pumps with a bardot neckline tiered dress or just the classic little black dress to woo your partner, suggest experts.

Dressing Tips For Valentine’s Day Date

Chimp 'Mini-Brains' Help Decode How Humans Got Big Brains

Chimp 'Mini-Brains' Help Decode How Humans Got Big Brains
Identifying what drove this evolutionary shift is fundamental to understanding what makes us human, the researchers said.

Chimp 'Mini-Brains' Help Decode How Humans Got Big Brains

Clashing With Your Mother Can Reduce Purpose In Life Later: Study

Clashing With Your Mother Can Reduce Purpose In Life Later: Study
A sense of purpose involves having the belief that one has a stable, far-reaching aim that organises and stimulates behaviour and goals to progress towards that objective.    

Clashing With Your Mother Can Reduce Purpose In Life Later: Study