Made with Love

Lonely People Don’t Sleep Very Well

Hudson

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 23, 2011
Messages
31
Lonely Sleep – People who are lonely do not tend to sleep well. Feelings of loneliness may interfere with a good night’s rest and can negatively influence health, according to a new study.“Loneliness has been associated with adverse effects on health,” said study lead author Lianne Kurina from University of Chicago in a press release.“We wanted to explore one potential pathway for this, the theory that sleep–a key behavior to staying healthy–could be compromised by feelings of loneliness.

The researchers studied 95 adults, aged 19 to 84 years old, in a rural South Dakota community. Despite not being socially isolated, some people had higher ratings of perceived loneliness and were more likely to report having fragmented sleep.“What we found was that loneliness does not appear to change the total amount of sleep in individuals, but awakens them more times during the night,” Kurina explained.

The degree of daytime sleepiness and total amount of sleep were not affected. The researchers believe there is a distinct difference between social isolation and loneliness.“It’s not just a product of very lonely individuals having poor sleep,” Kurina said.

“The relationship between loneliness and restless sleep appears to operate across the range of perceived connectedness.”
Social isolation is an objective measure of social interactions and relationships, whereas loneliness is a painful perception of social isolation or feelings of being an outcast.“Accordingly, loneliness is more closely associated with the quality rather than the number of relationships,” the researchers wrote in their paper.These results are similar to a 2002 U.S. study that compared being lonely in college students with sleep quality.

The more lonley they felt, the more their night-time sleep was fragmented.
“Whether you’re a young student at a major university or an older adult living in a rural community, we may all be dependent on feeling secure in our social environment in order to sleep soundly,” Kurina concluded.

“The results from these studies could further our understanding of how social and psychological factors ‘get under the skin’ and affect health.”The findings were published in the journal Sleep on Nov. 1.
 
Thank god someone had the wisdom to fund this research rather than another homeless shelter or other such piffle!
 
I bet poor little Kim Jong-Il doesn't get any sleep at all. :arf:

 
I sleep quite well, thank you. No having to hug the edge of the bed, with no sheets, and icy feet pressed to my back.
 
That's funny, I'm just too horny to sleep with a girl in my bed ...
 
I love to snuggle. I sleep much better with Sentry in the bed. I can see the validity of this study.
 
I wish at times I was alone in my bed......:bad:
2 cats and a dog..........
Plus a friend who visit.....:angel:
 
Back
Top Bottom