论文标题

环境热和人类睡眠

Ambient heat and human sleep

论文作者

Minor, Kelton, Bjerre-Nielsen, Andreas, Jonasdottir, Sigga Svala, Lehmann, Sune, Obradovich, Nick

论文摘要

环境温度在全球范围内升高,夜间记录的最大增长。同时,许多人群的睡眠不足的流行率不足,人类健康和福祉的巨大成本。即使近三分之一的人类寿命已经睡着了,但在全球范围内,温度和天气是否会影响现实环境中睡眠的客观度量。在这里,我们将包括超过700万个夜间睡眠记录的可穿戴设备的数十亿个睡眠测量值与从2015年到2017年的本地每日气象数据相关联。夜间温度的上升缩短了人内部睡眠持续时间,主要是通过延迟发作,增加了睡眠不足的可能性。对于低收入国家和老年人的居民而言,温度对睡眠损失的影响大大大,而女性的影响比男性更大。夜间温度在夏季和秋季几个月内升高了最大的睡眠损失,我们找不到短期适应的证据。将历史行为测量与气候模型的产出相结合,我们预测气候变化将进一步侵蚀人类睡眠,从而产生大量的地理不平等。我们的发现对适应计划具有重大影响,并照亮了一条途径,通过该途径,温度上升可能会影响全球公共卫生。

Ambient temperatures are rising globally, with the greatest increases recorded at night. Concurrently, the prevalence of insufficient sleep is increasing in many populations, with substantial costs to human health and well-being. Even though nearly a third of the human lifespan is spent asleep, it remains unknown whether temperature and weather impact objective measures of sleep in real-world settings, globally. Here we link billions of sleep measurements from wearable devices comprising over 7 million nighttime sleep records across 68 countries to local daily meteorological data from 2015 to 2017. Rising nighttime temperatures shorten within-person sleep duration primarily through delayed onset, increasing the probability of insufficient sleep. The effect of temperature on sleep loss is substantially larger for residents from lower income countries and older adults, and females are affected more than are males. Nighttime temperature increases inflict the greatest sleep loss during summer and fall months, and we do not find evidence of short-term acclimatization. Coupling historical behavioral measurements with output from climate models, we project that climate change will further erode human sleep, producing substantial geographic inequalities. Our findings have significant implications for adaptation planning and illuminate a pathway through which rising temperatures may globally impact public health.

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