By PAUL RECER AP Science Writer
WASHINGTON
(AP)--Americans are sleep-deprived workaholics, with only about
a third sleeping the recommended eight hours a night, and about
40 percent say they have trouble staying awake on the job, according
to a poll released Tuesday.
The survey
by the National Sleep Foundation said Americans are spending more
time working and less time having sex than they did five years
ago.
``Instead
of working to live, they are living to work, a shift that has
had a profound impact on their personal lives,'' the foundation
said.
The 2001 Sleep
in America poll of 1,004 adults found that 63 percent get less
than eight hours a night and about 31 percent get less than seven
hours. Many, the poll found, try to catch up on sleep on the weekends,
but even then the average slumber is 7.8 hours, still less than
ideal.
While they
are spending less time sleeping, 40 percent of those polled say
they are working longer hours than five years ago. The average
work week was 46 hours, while 38 percent said they worked 50 hours
or more a week.
Richard L.
Gelula, the foundation's executive director, said the survey showed
Americans do not want to give up any more sleep and would sleep
more if they thought it added to the quality of their lives.
But, he said,
``the bad news is far too many adults still sacrifice sleep, which
is unhealthy and counterproductive. ... A good night's sleep is
a necessity, not a luxury.''
Forty percent
of those surveyed say they become so sleepy during the day that
their work suffers at least a few days per month, with 22 percent
saying the problem occurs a few days each week. And 7 percent
say sleepiness on the job is a daily occurrence
To stay awake
during the day, 43 percent said they use caffeine and 5 percent
go for something stronger, such as stay-alert medications.
More than
half of the surveyed adults say they have driven cars while drowsy
during the past year, and 19 percent said they actually have fallen
asleep at the wheel. One percent said they have had an accident
after dozing off while driving.
While Americans
are getting less sleep in the bedroom, they are also getting less
sex, the survey showed.
Fifty-two
percent said they spend less time having sex than they did five
years ago, and 38 percent say they have sex less than once a week.
The survey
linked daytime sleepiness with marital problems. Among those having
sleep problems, 77 percent said they also had less marital satisfaction.
Among the happily married, 69 percent said they had sleep problems.
Thirty-four percent of all adults sleep alone, including 12 percent
of those who are married, the survey found.
Having children
also cuts into a good night's sleep, the survey showed. Adults
with children average 6.7 hours of sleep a night, while those
without children average 7.2 hours. Singles with no children average
about 7.1 hours, the poll showed.
The majority
(51 percent) reported insomnia at least a few nights a week in
the past year, while 29 percent said they have the problem nightly.
The most frequent insomnia-linked complaint, 34 percent, is not
feeling refreshed upon awakening, while 32 percent complain of
being awake much of the night.
Sleep disorders
are common, with 38 percent saying they snore a few nights each
week. Nine percent have sleep apnea, which is a pause in breathing
during sleep, and 13 percent reported restless legs syndrome,
a tendency for uncontrolled limb motion during sleep.
Television
takes up at least part of the last hour before bed for 87 percent
of the surveyed Americans. Seventy-three percent socialize with
friends a few nights a week before sleep. Other pre-sleep activities
included reading (53 percent); bathing (50 percent); doing household
chores (50 percent); sex (33 percent); listening to music or the
radio; going to the Internet (23 percent), and doing job-related
work, 21 percent.
The survey
was conducted for the foundation by WB&A Market Research.
It is based on telephone polling of 1,004 Americans who were at
least 18 years of age. The margin of error was plus or minus 3
percentage points.
Marcia Stein,
a spokeswoman for the National Sleep Foundation, said the Washington-based
organization promotes public education about sleep and sleep disorders.
She said it receives some support from bedding manufacturers.
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