Balance scale illustration showing short sleep as a top risk for lower life expectancy, stronger than diet or inactivity but behind smoking, per OHSU study.
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OHSU study finds short sleep is strongly associated with lower life expectancy across U.S. counties

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A new Oregon Health & Science University analysis of U.S. county data from 2019 to 2025 found that regularly getting less than seven hours of sleep per night is associated with shorter life expectancy. In the researchers’ models, the sleep–longevity link was stronger than associations seen for diet, physical activity and social isolation, and was exceeded only by smoking.

Researchers at Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) report that insufficient sleep is strongly associated with shorter life expectancy in a nationwide analysis of U.S. counties.

The study, published on December 8, 2025, in SLEEP Advances, compared county-level life expectancy estimates with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) survey data collected from 2019 through 2025. In the statistical models described by the authors, the association between sleep and life expectancy was stronger than the associations for diet, physical activity, and social isolation, while smoking showed a larger association than sleep.

"I didn't expect it to be so strongly correlated to life expectancy," said Andrew McHill, Ph.D., the study’s senior author and an associate professor affiliated with the OHSU School of Nursing, the OHSU School of Medicine, and OHSU’s Oregon Institute of Occupational Health Sciences. He added that people "should strive to get seven to nine hours of sleep if at all possible."

For the purpose of modeling, the researchers used the CDC definition of sufficient sleep as at least seven hours per night, which the OHSU summary said aligns with recommendations from the American Academy of Sleep Medicine and the Sleep Research Society.

The work was carried out largely by graduate students in OHSU’s Sleep, Chronobiology and Health Laboratory, and the authors described it as the first study to show year-by-year connections between sleep and life expectancy across every U.S. state.

The analysis did not examine biological mechanisms behind the relationship. McHill noted, however, that sleep plays a role in cardiovascular health, immune function, and brain performance.

"This research shows that we need to prioritize sleep at least as much as we do to what we eat or how we exercise," McHill said, adding: "Getting a good night's sleep will improve how you feel but also how long you live."

The paper lists Kathryn E. McAuliffe as lead author, with co-authors including Madeline R. Wary, Gemma V. Pleas, Kiziah E.S. Pugmire, Courtney Lysiak, Nathan F. Dieckmann, Brooke M. Shafer, and Andrew W. McHill. OHSU said the research was supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), as well as OHSU and Oregon state-related funding mechanisms described in the university’s release.

ሰዎች ምን እያሉ ነው

Discussions on X affirm the OHSU study's conclusion that insufficient sleep (<7 hours) is strongly linked to lower life expectancy across U.S. counties, surpassing diet, exercise, and social isolation in impact, and rivaling smoking. Users from health experts to influencers emphasize prioritizing sleep for longevity. Skeptical voices highlight potential ecological fallacy in county-level data. High-engagement posts urge better sleep habits amid modern lifestyles.

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Split-image of a young adult: depressed and tired on weekday vs. peacefully sleeping and rested on weekend, illustrating study on catch-up sleep reducing depressive symptoms.
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Study links weekend catch-up sleep to fewer daily depressive symptoms in 16- to 24-year-olds

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Teenagers and young adults who sleep longer on weekends than on weekdays were less likely to report feeling sad or depressed every day, according to a U.S. study that analyzed National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey data from 2021 to 2023.

New research indicates that poor sleep quality can make the brain age faster than the body, potentially increasing risks for conditions like dementia. Scientists suggest chronic inflammation from inadequate sleep plays a key role in this process. This finding clarifies a long-standing uncertainty about whether bad sleep causes cognitive decline or merely signals it.

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Researchers at the University of Florida report that lifestyle factors such as optimism, good-quality sleep and strong social support are linked to brains that appear as much as eight years younger than expected for a person’s age. The effect was observed even among adults living with chronic pain, underscoring how everyday behaviors may influence brain health over time.

A large UK study of over 33,000 low-activity adults has found that accumulating daily steps in longer, uninterrupted sessions is linked to significantly lower risks of early death and cardiovascular disease, compared to short bursts of walking. The research, published in Annals of Internal Medicine, suggests that how steps are grouped matters as much as total step count for those walking fewer than 8,000 steps per day.

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A preliminary analysis presented at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2025 found that adults with chronic insomnia who used melatonin for a year or longer had higher rates of new heart failure, heart‑failure hospitalization and all‑cause death over five years than matched nonusers. The observational findings do not prove causation and are not yet peer‑reviewed.

FMI and UN data show Japan leading life expectancy at 85 years, with Colombia at 78 years in 2025. Factors like healthcare access and education drive these figures. Projections suggest Colombia will reach 89 years by 2100, ranking fifth regionally.

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Walking in bouts of 10–15 minutes or longer was associated with substantially lower cardiovascular risk among adults taking fewer than 8,000 steps a day, with 15‑minute‑plus bouts tied to about a two‑thirds lower risk than very short walks, according to research published in Annals of Internal Medicine.

 

 

 

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