Not Just a Stereotype: Women Genuinely Need More Sleep Than Men, Science Reveals

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For years, the idea that women need more sleep than men might have seemed like an informal observation or cultural stereotype. But scientific research confirms it as a biological reality. A physician recently brought this finding — alongside four other surprising sleep facts — into public view, offering insights that could meaningfully change how people approach their nightly rest.
Women’s need for additional sleep is estimated at around 20 minutes per night compared to men. The reason traces back to multitasking and the heavier cognitive demands many women navigate throughout their waking hours. When the brain works harder — processing more simultaneously, switching contexts more frequently — it requires more time during sleep to clean up, consolidate, and prepare for the next day.
Sleep onset time is an often-ignored but meaningful health marker. Falling asleep should ideally take 10 to 20 minutes. Nodding off in under five minutes can be a sign of chronic sleep deprivation, as the body essentially collapses into sleep rather than easing into it. Struggling to fall asleep for 30 minutes or more, especially consistently, may be a signal of insomnia worth addressing.
On the topic of dreams, the physician confirms what many people have experienced — we forget almost all of them. Specifically, about 95 percent of dreams are lost within minutes of waking because they don’t get encoded in long-term memory. For anyone curious about their dream content, writing immediately upon waking is the most effective preservation strategy available.
The remaining two insights are practical and important. Going 17 hours without sleep impairs your cognitive functioning to a level comparable to mild alcohol intoxication — a sobering comparison that underscores the genuine danger of extreme fatigue. And for those relying on melatonin to help them sleep, using just 0.5 mg — an amount that mirrors natural secretion — tends to be more effective than popular higher-dose options.

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