Livin' on the MDedge

Medical-level empathy? Yup, ChatGPT can fake that


 

The realm of lost luggage and lost sleep

It may be convenient to live near an airport if you’re a frequent flyer, but it really doesn’t help your sleep numbers.

The first look at how such a common sound affects sleep duration showed that people exposed to even 45 decibels of airplane noise were less likely to get the 7-9 hours of sleep needed for healthy functioning, investigators said in Environmental Health Perspectives.

pxfuel

How loud is 45 dB exactly? A normal conversation is about 50 dB, while a whisper is 30 dB, to give you an idea. Airplane noise at 45 dB? You might not even notice it amongst the other noises in daily life.

The researchers looked at data from about 35,000 participants in the Nurses’ Health Study who live around 90 major U.S. airports. They examined plane noise every 5 years between 1995 and 2005, focusing on estimates of nighttime and daytime levels. Short sleep was most common among the nurses who lived on the West Coast, near major cargo airports or large bodies of water, and also among those who reported no hearing loss.

The investigators noted, however, that there was no consistent association between airplane noise and quality of sleep and stopped short of making any policy recommendations. Still, sleep is a very important, yet slept-on (pun intended) factor for our overall health, so it’s good to know if anything has the potential to cause disruption.

Pages

Recommended Reading

A purple warrior rises in the battle against diabetes
MDedge Internal Medicine
Transplant surgeon to 30,000 marathoners: Give me that liver
MDedge Internal Medicine
We have seen the future of healthy muffins, and its name is Roselle
MDedge Internal Medicine
The human-looking robot therapist will coach your well-being now
MDedge Internal Medicine
The air up there: Oxygen could be a bit overrated
MDedge Internal Medicine
Sweaty treatment for social anxiety could pass the sniff test
MDedge Internal Medicine
Lack of food for thought: Starve a bacterium, feed an infection
MDedge Internal Medicine
Previously unknown viral families hide in the darnedest places
MDedge Internal Medicine
Living the introvert’s dream: Alone for 500 days, but never lonely
MDedge Internal Medicine
Drive, chip, and putt your way to osteoarthritis relief
MDedge Internal Medicine