5 Surprising Sleep Revelations from a Doctor — Women Need More Sleep Than Men Tops the List

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Sleep research continues to reveal facts that challenge everyday assumptions, and a physician is helping bring some of the most important ones to public attention. Five surprising revelations cover everything from how long it should take to fall asleep to why women need more sleep than men — findings that have real implications for daily health decisions.

The gender sleep difference is the most conversation-starting of the five facts. Women may require around 20 additional minutes of sleep per night compared to men. The physician links this to the brain’s recovery needs following a day of intensive multitasking. Managing multiple tasks simultaneously is cognitively expensive, and the brain needs more sleep to process and recover from that expense. Many women operate in this high-demand mode consistently throughout the day.

Sleep latency — how long it takes to fall asleep — provides important health clues. The physician identifies 10 to 20 minutes as the healthy range. Consistently falling asleep faster suggests the body may be running dangerously low on sleep. Consistently taking longer than 20 minutes, especially when this is a regular experience, may indicate insomnia or other disruptions to the body’s sleep initiation process.

The disappearance of dreams is a universal and nearly complete phenomenon. Approximately 95 percent of dream content is gone within minutes of waking, because dreams occur in sleep stages that don’t support long-term memory formation. For anyone interested in their dream life, the physician recommends writing down whatever you remember immediately upon waking — before your waking mind has a chance to override those fleeting impressions.

The final two facts deserve attention from anyone managing their sleep health. Seventeen hours of continuous wakefulness creates cognitive impairment comparable to mild intoxication — a 0.05 blood alcohol level — with real consequences for judgment and performance. And with melatonin, starting at just 0.5 mg — the amount that most closely mimics the body’s natural production — tends to produce better results than the higher doses commonly found on store shelves.

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