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America's Sleep Crisis
Americans average 7.5 hours — better than Japan, worse than Europe. But one in three adults regularly gets less than the recommended minimum.
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Did you know
Americans average around 6.8 hours of sleep per night — below the recommended 7-9 hours for most adults. The CDC calls sleep deprivation a public health epidemic: insufficient sleep is linked to obesity, heart disease, diabetes, and depression. Yet American culture celebrates busyness and treats sleep as optional. "I'll sleep when I'm dead" is more than a saying — it's a policy.
See also: Mental Health DisordersSources
2 sources
- OfficialCDC Sleep and Sleep Disorders2024
- Intl. OrgOECD Time Use Database2023