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Losing Sleep Over the Pandemic? Work Flexibility May Be a Boon for Night Owls鈥 Health

Many so-called night people feel that, when it comes to society鈥檚 expectations about when the workday should start, they drew the short straw.

Research shows that 鈥渘ight owls鈥 are hard-wired to sleep later, yet 9-to-5 work schedules force them to battle their physiology and wake up early. Research also has shown that conventional timetables leave them vulnerable to physical and .

"It is harder for night owls to function in the world because they're out of sync with the conventional schedule,鈥 said Kelly Baron, an associate professor at the University of Utah who studies sleep health and clinically treats patients who have insomnia. She noted that poor sleep is also a driver of . 鈥淲e would get better performance out of employees if they were allowed to work at their best working time.鈥

Her research has found that keeping late evening hours can cause even healthy night owls to be prone to bad habits like eating fast food, not exercising, and socializing less.

But the covid-19 pandemic, which forced many people to telework, allowed more flexibility in work schedules, prompting sleep scientists to rethink assumptions about sleep and how to assess patients.

The pandemic 鈥渨as an international experiment to understand how sleep changes when work hours and work environments change,鈥 said Baron.

Researchers in Italy are among those tapping into this question. In a recent study, they found that many Italians who don鈥檛 typically fit into a traditional daylight timetable thrived and their health improved when the pandemic鈥檚 remote working conditions allowed them to work later hours.

Federico Salfi, a doctoral student at the University of L'Aquila and self-professed night owl, joined with colleagues late in 2020 how the work-from-home trend influenced Italian sleep habits. Through social media, they identified 875 people who represented in-office and remote workers. They then used web-based questionnaires to discover the impacts of remote working on sleep health. The findings: The pandemic鈥檚 work-from-home flexibility helped the participants better align their work and sleep schedules 鈥 many of them for the first time.

More specifically, the researchers found evidence that evening-type people slept longer and better while working from home, with a corresponding decrease in symptoms of depression and insomnia.

They also pointed out an important theme that echoes other studies 鈥 that people who fall into the night-owl category regularly sleep less than early risers. , Matthew Walker, a professor of neuroscience and psychology at the University of California-Berkeley and author of 鈥淲hy We Sleep,鈥 said it was the difference of 6.6 hours a night versus more than 7 hours a night, leading night owls to accumulate a chronic sleep debt. (The study is available as a preprint and has not yet been peer-reviewed.)

So why don鈥檛 such people just go to bed earlier? The answer is complicated.

To feel sleepy requires a biochemical cascade of events to kick into action, and that timing is determined by a person鈥檚 chronotype. A chronotype is an that determines when people feel awake or tired during a 24-hour period. The cycles are genetically set, with about half of people falling into the midrange 鈥 meaning they neither wake at dawn nor fall asleep past midnight 鈥 and the others evenly split as .

In prehistoric times, a mix of mismatched bedtimes served an evolutionary purpose. , and vice versa. Modern society, however, rewards early risers while stigmatizing those burning the midnight oil, said Brant Hasler, associate professor at the University of Pittsburgh and part of the university鈥檚 Center for Sleep and Circadian Science. 鈥淲e are catering to one portion of our population at the expense of another.鈥

Walker has outlined specific health consequences on his podcast. Late-night types are 30% more likely than early birds to develop hypertension, which can lead to strokes or heart attacks, and 1.6 times as likely to have Type 2 diabetes since sleep affects blood sugar regulation. They are also two to three times as likely to be diagnosed with depression and twice as likely to use antidepressants.

A also found that evening people who slept more during the pandemic still had remarkably poorer mental health compared with morning larks.

Neither Walker nor Hasler was involved in the Italian study.

Still, some experts noted that the Italian study had limitations.

鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 find clearly included in the study: Were people always on those schedules? [Or did they change after the pandemic?] Because that is something that really matters,鈥 said Stijn Massar, a senior research fellow at the National University of Singapore. Plus, since covid has drastically affected almost all aspects of life, pandemic-era sleep data can get muddied by the many lifestyle changes people have had to endure.

Moreover, sleep scientists are still wondering if it is always healthier for someone to sleep in sync with their chronotype.

It鈥檚 a question of prioritizing individual schedules versus community schedules. But 鈥渟leep is one of the great mysteries of life,鈥 said Massar. 鈥淭his is all somewhat speculative,鈥 with each new study providing glimpses of the bigger picture.

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