Australians are literally losing sleep over the cost of living crisis, new report reveals

A survey has found only one in ten Australians wake up feeling refreshed.

Woman on her phone while laying down.

Financial stress is stopping many Australians from getting a good night's sleep. Source: Getty / Dmitry Marchenko

Key Points
  • Nearly half of Australians say they wake up feeling tired after a night's sleep, according to a new global survey
  • One in three put poor sleep down to financial stress, while only one in ten reported feeling refreshed.
  • The trend is "worrying", according to one sleep physiologist, who warns lack of sleep can have health consequences.
Australians are losing sleep over the cost of living crisis, with one in three blaming financial pressure for their declining quality of rest.

That's the finding from ResMed's global sleep survey, which has also revealed 42 per cent of Australians usually wake up feeling tired - the second-highest level among a dozen countries.

More than 50 per cent of Australians report stress has affected their sleep since COVID-19, and only one in 10 wake up feeling refreshed.
The average Australian has 6.9 hours of sleep each night, which is below the recommended period of between seven and nine hours, the survey found.

That's fewer hours than most people in other surveyed countries, with the exception of Japan and the UK, where people average 6.5 hours and 6.8 hours a night, respectively.

Sleep is an essential pillar of health alongside diet and exercise, and many important functions happen during sleep to help the body repair itself, Sleep Health Foundation chief executive Moira Junge says.

"We urge the community and the government to take sleep seriously," Dr Junge said.
The survey fielded answers from more than 20,000 people across the US, Germany, France, Korea, Mexico, Singapore, Brazil, China, India, Japan, the UK and Australia.

The release of the survey's results came ahead of World Sleep Day on Friday.

A consistent lack of sleep was associated with health consequences including an increased risk of diabetes, obesity, hypertension, depression, heart attack and stroke, ResMed warned.
ResMed sleep physiologist Tim Stephenson described the finding that just one in 10 Australians were waking up feeling refreshed as "worrying".

Gen Z and millennials were getting the most sleep on average worldwide, while baby boomers were getting the least, the survey found.

Millennials were also the most likely to use a sleep tracker and among the most likely to be satisfied with their quality of sleep.

Those who worked remote jobs were getting more sleep than others, and men were most likely to be satisfied with both their quantity and quality of sleep.

ResMed is a medical equipment company based in California that makes machines to treat sleep apnea.

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2 min read
Published 17 March 2023 8:02am
Updated 17 March 2023 10:14am
Source: AAP, SBS



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