Medindia
Discover the benefits of premium membership Click Here
Medindia » Health Watch

Trouble Getting Sleep at Night? A Weekend Camping Can Really Help

by Julia Samuel on February 2, 2017 at 11:03 PM
Listen to this News

Highlights

Spending time outdoors in the sun can help you fall asleep on time. In modern times, sitting up late into the night,watching TV, fiddling with our smartphones, or reading a book by lamplight has become common. This makes it difficult to wake up the next day.


The solution to these sleeping woes could be as simple as spending few days in backcountry camping, no matter the season.

‘Late sleep timing in modern society is associated with negative performance and health outcomes such as morning sleepiness, risk of accidents, reduced work productivity and substance abuse.’

"Late circadian and sleep timing in modern society are associated with negative performance and health outcomes such as morning sleepiness and accidents, reduced work productivity and school performance, substance abuse, mood disorders, diabetes, and obesity," says Kenneth Wright at the University of Colorado Boulder.

"Our findings demonstrate that living in our modern environments contributes to late circadian timing regardless of season and that a weekend camping trip can reset our clock rapidly."

An earlier study by Wright's team found that our modern exposure to electrical lighting causes about a two-hour delay in our internal clocks, as evidenced by a shift in the normal fluctuations of the hormone melatonin. They found that a week of summer sun shifted those internal clocks back, sending people to bed earlier, without changing how long they slept.

To find out the impact of camping on season changes from summer to winter and its effect on our internal clocks, researchers sent another group of five active people camping for a week in the chilly Colorado winter. They went right around the time of the winter solstice when the days were at their shortest--no flashlights or cell phones allowed--and watched what would happen to their sleep and hormonal rhythms.

The data suggest that our modern lifestyles reduce light exposure in the winter by a whopping 13 times. With increased time spent outdoors, people in the study started going to bed at a more reasonable hour. Their internal clocks, measured by the timing of when melatonin levels began to rise in their bodies, shifted more than 2.5 hours earlier. Their sleeping patterns followed these changes in melatonin levels and people went to sleep earlier.

In the new report, Wright and his colleagues found that a weekend spent camping prevented the typical weekend pattern of staying up late and sleeping in and prevented individuals' circadian clocks from being shifted even later.

The findings show that people are responsive to seasonal changes in daylight just as other animals are. While our modern conveniences may leave us out of sync, our clocks can be readily reset with light exposure.

If a person wants to go to bed at an earlier hour, then a weekend spent camping could be just the thing, Wright says. To stay on track, consistency is key. It's best to keep a regular schedule. He also recommends increasing daytime exposure to sunlight and reducing nighttime exposure to electrical lighting. There could be other solutions, too.

"Our findings highlight an opportunity for architectural design to bring in more natural sunlight into the modern built environment and to work with lighting companies to incorporate tunable lighting that would be able to change across the day and night to enhance performance, health, and well-being," he says.

Reference

  1. Kenneth Wright et al., Trouble getting to sleep? Scientists say go camping, Current Biology (2017) http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2016.12.041.


Source: Medindia

Cite this Article

Please use one of the following formats to cite this article in your essay, paper or report:

  • APA

    Julia Samuel. (2017, February 02). Trouble Getting Sleep at Night? A Weekend Camping Can Really Help. Medindia. Retrieved on Dec 01, 2024 from https://www.medindia.net/news/healthwatch/trouble-getting-sleep-at-night-a-weekend-camping-can-really-help-167474-1.htm.

  • MLA

    Julia Samuel. "Trouble Getting Sleep at Night? A Weekend Camping Can Really Help". Medindia. Dec 01, 2024. <https://www.medindia.net/news/healthwatch/trouble-getting-sleep-at-night-a-weekend-camping-can-really-help-167474-1.htm>.

  • Chicago

    Julia Samuel. "Trouble Getting Sleep at Night? A Weekend Camping Can Really Help". Medindia. https://www.medindia.net/news/healthwatch/trouble-getting-sleep-at-night-a-weekend-camping-can-really-help-167474-1.htm. (accessed Dec 01, 2024).

  • Harvard

    Julia Samuel. 2017. Trouble Getting Sleep at Night? A Weekend Camping Can Really Help. Medindia, viewed Dec 01, 2024, https://www.medindia.net/news/healthwatch/trouble-getting-sleep-at-night-a-weekend-camping-can-really-help-167474-1.htm.

View Non AMP Site | Back to top ↑