The Preindustrial article by Jerome M. Siegel highlights a
dominant cultural issue surrounding sleep health – which is the advent of first
world luxuries and amenities – like electricity 24/7 and the internet. The paper highlights an examination of sleep
duration and timing as they are related to natural light, ambient temperature,
and seasons in three still preindustrial cultures: those being the Hadza,
Kalahari San, and the Tsimane. The study
found these societies’ sleep schedules to be fairly consistent with natural
light – any changes being limited to perhaps changes daylight depending on the
season.
For example, according to the study, the Tsimane and the San
experience about an hour longer night’s sleep during the winter as compared to
summer; this is not surprising because both of these groups live just far
enough south of the Equator to feel the swing of season changes (15 and 20
degrees respectively). What did surprise
me however, a striking finding of the study, was that sleep patterns only minimally
varied among these peoples – despite them being separated from each other by
both some stretch of geography and by language, in other words totally separate
aside from the unifying nature of their pre-industry culture. Therefore, it can be inferred that such
patterns are not in fact dictated by geographical location or culture by rather
by the human condition (physiology). If
this conclusion is to be accurate, it would explain why even residents of “the
city that never sleeps,” i.e. New York City, can hit that wall of bodily
exhaustion without proper sleep health maintenance.
As a college student evaluating the information provided and
analyzed in this article, I am not shocked about its findings related to
circadian rhythm sleep patterns and artificial light, but am recommitted to my
ongoing effort to “normalize” my sleep schedule, and get both a healthy quality
and healthy quantity of sleep, like those in undeveloped countries or my
ancestors. Even my parents talk about their
daily routines of no cell phones, finding entertainment outdoors only – coming
home when it got dark, reading, and going to bed. So even with artificial light, they still had
a more “natural” sleep routine/ bed time, but today, with so many forms of
stimulation that maintain the body’s alertness rather than naturally getting to
sleep, we are (and this is a generalization) a pretty sleep-deprived generation…and
I am very concerned for the next generation’s sleep health.
I commented on Ashley Zapata and Rachel Moore's blogs this week.
I commented on Ashley Zapata and Rachel Moore's blogs this week.
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