COVID-19-mandated social restrictions unveil the impact of social time pressure on sleep and body clock

Dec 18, 2020Scientific reports

Social time pressure’s impact on sleep and body clock revealed by COVID-19 social restrictions

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Abstract

A total of 7,517 adults reported significant changes in sleep patterns during COVID-19 social restrictions.

  • Mid-sleep time on workdays was delayed by 50 minutes, while it was delayed by 22 minutes on free days.
  • Sleep duration increased by 26 minutes on workdays but decreased by 9 minutes on free days during social restrictions.
  • decreased by approximately 30 minutes as sleep-wake times approached those of pre-restriction free days.
  • Changes in sleep duration and social jetlag correlated with the use of alarm clocks and were more pronounced in young adults.
  • Findings suggest that relaxed social time pressure could promote longer sleep and reduced reliance on alarm clocks.

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Key numbers

50 min
Mid-Sleep Time Delay on Workdays
Average delay in mid-sleep time on workdays during restrictions.
26 min
Increase in Sleep Duration on Workdays
Average increase in sleep duration on workdays during restrictions.
30 min
Decrease in
Average decrease in during restrictions.

Full Text

What this is

  • The Global Chrono Corona Survey (GCCS) examined how COVID-19 social restrictions impacted sleep and circadian rhythms.
  • 7517 adults from 40 countries reported their sleep patterns before and during these restrictions.
  • Findings indicate that relaxed social time pressure led to increased sleep duration and reduced .

Essence

  • COVID-19 social restrictions resulted in significant changes to sleep patterns, with adults sleeping longer and experiencing less . The average mid-sleep time was delayed, and sleep duration increased on workdays.

Key takeaways

  • Mid-sleep times were delayed by 50 minutes on workdays and 22 minutes on free days during social restrictions. This shift suggests a realignment of sleep patterns as social time pressure decreased.
  • Sleep duration increased by 26 minutes on workdays but decreased by 9 minutes on free days. This indicates that while people adapted to relaxed schedules, their sleep needs varied by day type.
  • decreased by approximately 30 minutes, showing a closer alignment of sleep times between workdays and free days during the restrictions. This suggests that reduced social time pressure allows for better synchronization of sleep with biological needs.

Caveats

  • The study did not account for all potential variables affecting sleep, such as health status or socio-economic factors. This limits the ability to generalize findings across different populations.
  • Data were based on self-reported sleep patterns, which may introduce bias or inaccuracies in the reported sleep durations and timings.

Definitions

  • Social Jetlag (SJL): The discrepancy between internal circadian time and external social time, often resulting from differing sleep schedules on workdays vs. free days.

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