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Sleeping This Much Increases Your Diabetes Risk By 58%, New Study Finds

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  • Sleeping This Much Increases Your Diabetes Risk By 58%, New Study Finds

    If you want to avoid this chronic condition, it might be time to rethink your sleep schedule.

    There are few things better than getting a good night's rest. You wake up feeling happier, healthier, more refreshed, and ready to take on the day. However, between work, family, and day-to-day stresses, it's not always easy to log a solid eight hours every night.

    In fact, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), one-third of U.S. adults don't get the recommended amount of sleep at night. Unfortunately, it's more than fatigue you may have in store if you're getting the wrong amount of sleep: a new study suggests it could significantly increase your diabetes risk. Read on to discover which amount of sleep could be putting your health at risk. And if you want to improve your health fast, check out The 7 Healthiest Foods to Eat Right Now.

    A new study published in the journal Nature and Science of Sleep reveals that getting inadequate sleep may be a significant contributor to your risk of developing type 2 diabetes.

    Among a group of 84,404 adult participants whose healthcare records were obtained from the U.K. Biobank, those who typically slept less than five hours per night were found to have a 58% higher risk of developing diabetes in the next five to seven years as compared to those who regularly slept between seven and eight hours a night.

    It's not just your diabetes risk that skyrockets when you get inadequate sleep, however.

    The same study found that short sleep duration may play a significant factor in your risk of becoming obese, too. The study's researchers discovered that study subjects who regularly got just five hours of sleep at night were 48% more likely to become obese in the subsequent five to seven years than those who typically slept for seven to eight hours.

    It may also play a major role in your mental health.

    There are a wide variety of factors that may affect your mental health—and the amount of sleep you get at night certainly numbers among them.

    The Nature and Science of Sleep study found that individuals who regularly got five or fewer hours of sleep at night had a 44% higher risk of developing "organic mental disorder and mood disorders" in the following five to seven years than their better-rested counterparts.

    If you think that staying in bed for hours and hours will help combat the effects of those years of sleeping poorly, think again.

    A 2003 study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine found that people who sleep for more than nine hours a night have a greater risk of coronary heart disease.

  • #2
    Makes sense, sleep is very important. I recommend people get 9 hours in bed (8 hours of which should be sleep) same time everyday. I think the correlation they see about people who sleep more than 9+ with higher association of coronary heart disease I think the sleeping is more of a symptom of coronary heart disease than the cause. I cant see how someone will need more than 8-9 hours a night consistently to feel rested, if you body is getting more than that consistently than I believe something in your system is off and you should get checked. I am not a doctor these are just assumptions I have.

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    • #3
      Originally posted by TheBoxGod View Post
      Makes sense, sleep is very important. I recommend people get 9 hours in bed (8 hours of which should be sleep) same time everyday. I think the correlation they see about people who sleep more than 9+ with higher association of coronary heart disease I think the sleeping is more of a symptom of coronary heart disease than the cause. I cant see how someone will need more than 8-9 hours a night consistently to feel rested, if you body is getting more than that consistently than I believe something in your system is off and you should get checked. I am not a doctor these are just assumptions I have.
      I rarely get more than six during the week, which seems to be the norm for working stiffs like me.

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      • #4
        Nash has always believed that 7-8 hours is the ideal nights sleep. Nash out.

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        • #5
          Originally posted by OctoberRed View Post

          I rarely get more than six during the week, which seems to be the norm for working stiffs like me.
          Yeah its not optimal but the body does an amazing job at adjusting to what it gets rather than what it wants.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by TheBoxGod View Post

            Yeah its not optimal but the body does an amazing job at adjusting to what it gets rather than what it wants.
            I get my sleep in during the weekends, at least 8-9 hours on Saturday and Sunday

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            • #7
              Originally posted by OctoberRed View Post

              I get my sleep in during the weekends, at least 8-9 hours on Saturday and Sunday
              Yup you got to get your rest in, like a aunt of mines was having tons of health issues, constant diarrhea, vertigo, and overall tiredness. I told her to just try this, stay in bed till you wake up naturally (shes retired, so doable) and she did it some days she would wake up at 1pm-2pm in the after noon, and some days at 11am, til finally her body just balanced out and her Fatigue, Diarrhea, Vertigo subsided, Her body was so ran down from just the hustle and bustle of a long life of work and it just wanted some rest. She used to get up early just cause for no real reason just routine and by noon she would be tired and take a nap and wake up around 3pm and be up till 7pm take another hour nap and then be up till like 11pm-midnight and do it all again but what was happening was she was never really getting true beneficial rest now she sleeps all through the night and rarely takes any naps during the day.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by TheBoxGod View Post

                Yup you got to get your rest in, like a aunt of mines was having tons of health issues, constant diarrhea, vertigo, and overall tiredness. I told her to just try this, stay in bed till you wake up naturally (shes retired, so doable) and she did it some days she would wake up at 1pm-2pm in the after noon, and some days at 11am, til finally her body just balanced out and her Fatigue, Diarrhea, Vertigo subsided, Her body was so ran down from just the hustle and bustle of a long life of work and it just wanted some rest. She used to get up early just cause for no real reason just routine and by noon she would be tired and take a nap and wake up around 3pm and be up till 7pm take another hour nap and then be up till like 11pm-midnight and do it all again but what was happening was she was never really getting true beneficial rest now she sleeps all through the night and rarely takes any naps during the day.
                If I wasn't working I would sleep 8-9 hours a day easy.
                TheBoxGod TheBoxGod likes this.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by OctoberRed View Post

                  If I wasn't working I would sleep 8-9 hours a day easy.
                  Yup, I assume most will if it wasn't for responsibilities that must take priorities over sometimes ones own health.
                  OctoberRed OctoberRed likes this.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by TheBoxGod View Post

                    Yup, I assume most will if it wasn't for responsibilities that must take priorities over sometimes ones own health.
                    Work and binging on streaming platform shows.
                    TheBoxGod TheBoxGod likes this.

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