Science Black and brown Minnesotans get worse sleep than white people. Researchers at the University of Minnesota say it’s hurting their health. - "In many Somali homes in the Twin Cities, smoke detectors with low batteries beep around the clock"

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Over the last two decades, researchers and policymakers have been paying more and more attention to how everything from housing to racism to pollution influences health — and how these social determinants contribute to health disparities.

But newer research is finding that one thing has been missing from that list: sleep.

“Sleep is absolutely a determinant of health,” said Dr. Rachel Widome, an associate professor in epidemiology and community health at the University of Minnesota. “Sleep has an impact on a whole host of health outcomes from physical to mental.”

Sleep can be seen as a resource, Widome said, one that Black and brown people have less access to, which exacerbates health inequities. People who don’t sleep as well appear to be at a higher risk for a slew of negative health outcomes, including cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, hypertension, obesity, and even death.

Dr. Ivan Wu, an assistant professor at the University of Minnesota’s School of Public Health who researches the connection between sleep, obesity, and cancer, said that poor sleep perpetuates ongoing health disparities. “Not getting enough sleep is related to all these terrible things,” he said.

Until recently, most research in sleep disparities focused on documenting the problem. But now, Wu and others are beginning the process of finding solutions.

Identifying the problem

The picture that has emerged from a decade of research is a familiar one: Black and brown Americans are much more likely to sleep poorly than white Americans. And the darker a person’s skin color is, the worse their sleep tends to be, said Dr. Dayna A. Johnson, a sleep epidemiologist at Emory University.

“The theory is that racial minorities experience a stress that is unique and chronic and additive to the general stressors that all people experience,” said Johnson, who was one of the first researchers to work on sleep disparities. “We all experience stress, but there are added stressors for certain groups. For certain populations, racism fits into that category.”

People who experience racism and ruminate about it at night may have problems falling asleep, according to a study Johnson led published in the journal Sleep. And people who anticipate racism may experience interference with their sleep-wake cycle, she said, since their body may be in a heightened state of arousal, with higher blood pressure and variability of heart rate.

Structural racism is also a fundamental contributor to sleep disparities, Johnson said. For example, people of color are still more likely to live in neighborhoods that are not conducive to sleep, areas experts sometimes refer to as “sleep deserts.” Air pollution can cause inflammation and contribute to sleep apnea. Places with higher pollution are often close to highways and have fewer trees and sidewalks–attributes that allow people to exercise safely.

Noisier nights, whether from traffic or thin walls between apartments, hinder sleep. The sense of safety can also cause sleepless nights.

The longer a foreign-born person lives in the U.S., the worse their sleep becomes, Johnson said. She suspects this phenomenon could stem from the built-up stress of language barriers, for example, or worsening dietary habits.

The National Institutes of Health has funded more research on sleep disparities in the last several years, and it is now considered a priority area, Johnson said. But developing ways to solve the issue is in its infancy.
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GRAPHIC CREDIT: Hannah Ihekoronye. DATA SOURCE: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Working toward sleep equity

Wu, a clinical psychologist, began researching sleep inequities while working at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, in Houston. There, he realized that the subject of sleep was often missing from research on obesity and cancer risk.

Since moving to Minneapolis last fall, Wu is hoping to extend the work he started in Houston. A pilot study he began there involves evaluating whether the risk of cancer and obesity can be lessened through sleep interventions. Through individual counseling sessions over the course of a month, Wu adapts established cognitive behavior therapy for insomnia to the population of Black adults he’s working with. He’s found that the practice works as long as neighborhood-related stressors, such as loud traffic, don’t interfere.

The participants in Houston were recruited through relationships with Black churches there. Now, he’s looking to build relationships with local churches to expand that research in Minneapolis.

Wu is also teaming up with a friend he met during graduate school at Michigan State, Dr. Abdifatah Ali, on a cancer prevention initiative with the Twin Cities’ East African community funded by the Masonic Cancer Center. In the first phase of that project, researchers will talk to community members about their beliefs, attitudes and knowledge around cancer screenings, physical activity, diet and sleep, said Abdifatah, now an assistant professor at the U of M’s Carlson School of Management.

Eventually, the pair hopes to be able to train community health workers to disseminate information and correct disinformation on cancer-prevention strategies, including healthy sleep.

Individual “fixes,” such as using mindfulness and yoga to create a calmer state of mind before sleep or Wu’s cognitive behavior sleep therapy program, often work. But there are often external factors, such as pollution, that are beyond an individual’s control. So both Johnson and Wu believe that sleep equity solutions need to be community oriented in order to effect substantial and sustainable change. “It’s not the individual; it’s the context in which they live,” Johnson said.

That means solutions need to be developed across an array of contexts. At the policy level, adjusting school start times could foster better sleep for kids, for example. In doctor’s clinics, physicians could talk about sleep health. In the public health sphere, knowledge around sleep and local customs could be disseminated through healthy sleep campaigns.

One example: In many Somali homes in the Twin Cities, smoke detectors with low batteries beep around the clock. Many believe the devices beep when they’re working properly, Abdifatah said, or that it’s the landlord’s responsibility to “fix” them. Such misinformation could be corrected with a community-wide effort.

Widome pointed out that sleep is often viewed as “garbage” or “throwaway” time.

“If you’re getting the right amount of sleep, you’re spending a third of your life sleeping,” she said. “How much time do we spend thinking about our health in the other two-thirds of the day — what we do in our leisure time, how physically active we are, what we eat?”
 
Could it be the last 20 years of academia, media and government telling them 24/7/365 that whitey is out to get them? That nothing they build will last more than 10 seconds until the racists tear it down and burn it? And that the pure evil that is modern AmeriKKKa will suffer no consequences for it at all?!
People never seem to think that constantly consuming bad news is bad for them.

I have a strong theory that a lot of COVID "hospitalizations" are from people who didn't know what they had, but they might have thought it was COVID and they thought they were going to die, but no one had a clear idea on what it was, so if there was a crowded hospital, it's because everyone was panicking. Additionally, a lot of "long COVID" is just repackaged hypochondria. Meanwhile, if you spend a lot of time convincing yourself that you're sick and thinking the worst, well, fuckiing YES it is going to affect your physical health.

"sleep disparity"
"sleep desert"

The grift really does never end. I can't imagine what it must be like to be a person that says shit like this unironically.
It's a lot like "period poverty". There's this desperation to make every personal problem that is almost completely actionable the responsibility of someone else. (No one asks what the fuck people did before there were disposable feminine products.)

You can't sleep? Can't possibly be your fault.
 
The silence must indeed be deafening. No gunfire or chimpouts in the streets to lull the baboons to sleep. But if Minnesota keeps importing subliterate shitskins, that'll become the norm.
 
True story. I've driven Mexican guys to and from work. They fall asleep the second they sit in the car and don't wake up until you pull up to their place. Newborns don't sleep as well as Mexican guys.

In Mexico a man will ride his burro to the cantina because the animal knows how to get home when the man passes out drunk on the ride back.
 
In Mexico a man will ride his burro to the cantina because the animal knows how to get home when the man passes out drunk on the ride back.
lol That's too awesome. It reminds me of the Kevin Costner Robin Hood movie, how the horse knew precisely where the merry men's secret forest hideout was so he could bring the blind guy there without any guidance. OT but that movie ruled.
I need the Mexican gene that allows me to sleep and wake on demand.
Must be nice, huh?

I'm pretty good at falling asleep in less than ideal circumstances but I've got nothing on them.

And people who anticipate racism may experience interference with their sleep-wake cycle, she said, since their body may be in a heightened state of arousal.
So research shows that black people are getting turned on by the possibilty of racism in their near future? My God, they're so weird.
 
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bulb heads being too stupid to purchase a couple 9 volt batteries... SOUNDS LIKE A CASE OF RACISM!

I too hate replacing batteries for my smoke detector and managed to replace the ones in and near my bedroom with ones that are wired into my house's electric so I never have to deal with them again
 
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People who experience racism and ruminate about it at night may have problems falling asleep, according to a study Johnson led published in the journal Sleep. And people who anticipate racism may experience interference with their sleep-wake cycle, she said, since their body may be in a heightened state of arousal, with higher blood pressure and variability of heart rate.
“The theory is that racial minorities experience a stress that is unique and chronic and additive to the general stressors that all people experience,” said Johnson, who was one of the first researchers to work on sleep disparities. “We all experience stress, but there are added stressors for certain groups. For certain populations, racism fits into that category.”
"No, I don't think white people who worry about being constantly falsely accused of racism by whiny liberal women have problems falling asleep. No, I don't think normal people worrying about the high levels of violence due to their increasingly diverse neighborhoods have sleep issues either."
 
bulb heads being too stupid to purchase a couple 9 volt batteries... SOUNDS LIKE A CASE OF RACISM!

I too hate replacing batteries for my smoke detector and managed to replace the ones in and near my bedroom with ones that are wired into my house's electric so I never have to deal with them again

Odd. I've got those, but they still take a battery. The theory being, if your house is on fire, power isn't going to necessarily be working. So despite the fact that they're wired into the house grid, every two or three years they start beeping and I have to replace the battery.

And you know what? I fucking do, because holy shit I'd go mad in a day and deaf in a week if I didn't. The chirp is very pronounced.

Honestly I have no idea what the point of wiring them into the house even is, I don't seem to need to replace the battery any less than I used to with conventional ones. But they're code here, sadly.
 
I had that ghetto beep in my house about a year after I moved in, drove me legitimately insane.

It turns out the previous owners had stored some new, unused smoke detectors in a crawl space and apparently forgot about them, the batteries died in both of them at the same time. It took weeks to find them.

By the end I was like Jack Nicholson in The Shining, lurching around the house with a hammer; no chill anywhere until the beeps stopped. Intolerable.
 
I hear they can't sleep because they know the time of the darkies is up once Will Stancil gets in office.
 
Do they need everything done for them???
Yes, out of all their racial segregationist movements, there's one that wants to make the deep south a blacks only nation. The problem being, they want the area to be blacks only, but still want to be connected to the white man's government and banking system. As much as they cry racism and hate white people, they really don't want to be separated.

That aside, as far as I knew, smoke detectors are the purview of landlords; at least that's how it is out here, especially with apartment buildings.
 
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