top | item 40894859

(no title)

inetsee | 1 year ago

For those of you who don't like paywalls (like me) an unlocked version of the research is here https://www.bhf.org.uk/informationsupport/heart-matters-maga...

And if you want a deep dive, the original article (including a LOT of details about the research) is here https://academic.oup.com/ehjdh/article/2/4/658/6423198

discuss

order

gruez|1 year ago

Skimming the study I'm not really convinced that the concept of a "golden hour" actually exists. For one it's a cohort study and not a RCT, so reverse causation (ie. people with good sleep sleep at 10-11) can't be ruled out. My guess is that sleeping later than 10-11 is associated with not getting enough sleep (going to bed late = less sleep), whereas sleeping earlier than 10-11 is associated with waking early (eg. waking at 4am so you can work at the bakery at 5am) which is also bad for sleep.

Flozzin|1 year ago

I felt the study was flawed the instant I saw they tied the golden hour to a time. So if I drive a mile to cross the river into the next time zone, I can stay up an extra hour? This study should have been tied to a concept of sleep rhythm or how long you stay up after you wake each morning. But tying it to such a poor concept of our time(which is tied to time zones which abruptly start/end at specific locations) doesn't give me much faith in the study.