Health and Healthcare Systems

Sleeping less than 5 hours boosts risk of illness, plus other health stories you need to read this week

health news roundup

At the age of 50, getting less sleep can significantly impact your health and increase your risk of death. Image: Unsplash/Lux Graves

Shyam Bishen
Head, Centre for Health and Healthcare; Member of the Executive Committee, World Economic Forum
This article is part of: Centre for Health and Healthcare

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  • This weekly round-up brings you key health news stories from the past seven days.
  • Top stories: Shorter sleep linked to disease, study finds; Next pandemic could emerge from melting glaciers due to climate change; Lockdowns affected babies' language and communication skills.

1. Sleeping less than 5 hours is hazardous to well-being, new study finds

The famous inventor Thomas Edison claimed he only required about three to four hours of sleep each night, according to The New York Times. Yet a new study from PLoS Medicine found those who sleep five hours or less around the age of 50 have a 30% greater risk of multiple illnesses than those who sleep seven hours.

The study used data spanning 25 years and examined whether sleep duration is associated with incidence of a first chronic disease, subsequent multimorbidity and mortality. It found shorter sleep at 50 was also associated with a higher risk of death during the study period, mainly linked to the increased risk of chronic disease.

"This work reinforces that getting only short sleep is not good for us," Professor Derk-Jan Dijk, Director of the UK's Surrey Sleep Centre, told BBC News. "Generally, it's not healthy – although for some, it may be OK. The big question is why do some people sleep less. What is causing it and is there anything we can do about it? Sleep is a modifiable lifestyle factor to a certain extent."

2. The next pandemic could emerge from melting glaciers

Viruses and bacteria have been discovered locked up in glacier ice, and scientists say that they could spill over into animals as the ice melts due to climate change.

The risk of viral spillover – where a virus infects a new host for the first time – may be higher close to melting glaciers, according to research reported by UK newspaper The Guardian.

Dr Stéphane Aris-Brosou and his colleagues at the University of Ottawa in Canada collected soil and sediment samples from Lake Hazen, near where it received inflows of meltwater from glaciers.

“For all we know, it could be the same as the likelihood of host switching posed by viruses from the mud in your local pond,” said Arwyn Edwards, Director of the Interdisciplinary Centre for Environmental Microbiology at Aberystwyth University in Wales.

"However, we do urgently need to explore the microbial worlds all over our planet to understand these risks in context”, he said. “Two things are very clear now. Firstly, that the Arctic is warming rapidly and the major risks to humanity are from its influence on our climate. Secondly, that diseases from elsewhere are finding their way into the vulnerable communities and ecosystems of the Arctic.”

Discover

What is the World Economic Forum doing to manage emerging risks from COVID-19?

3. Other Health News in brief

A study of babies born in Ireland during the early stages of the pandemic suggests that lockdowns affected their language and communication skills. Compared with pre-pandemic babies, lockdown babies were less likely to have one definite and meaningful word (89% versus 77%), to point at people or objects (93% versus 84%), or to be able to wave goodbye (94% versus 88%), according to the study, published in the journal Archives of Disease in Childhood.

A new brief, developed by WHO, together with the International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness and the University of Newcastle, found that smokers stand to develop age-related macular degeneration up to 5.5 years earlier than non-smokers. The condition blurs a person’s central vision making it difficult for them to do everyday tasks like reading or driving.

Researchers have grown brain cells in a lab that have learned to play the 1970s video game Pong. The "mini-brain" can sense and respond to its environment, according to the BBC. It’s hoped the technology might eventually be used to test treatments for neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's.

Almost 500 million people will develop disease attributable to physical inactivity, between 2020 and 2030, costing US$ 27 billion annually, unless governments take action, according to a first-ever global study from the World Health Organisation. The report, which gathered data from 194 nations, found less than 50% of countries have a national physical activity policy. "We need more countries to scale up policies to support people to be more active through physical activity," said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General.

The climate crisis poses a "growing threat" to health in previously milder climates, according to the Chief Executive of the UK Health Security Agency. Professor Dame Jenny Harries has warned of dangers to food security, flooding and insect-borne diseases due to global warming. “In France, they have had cases of infectious disease that you would normally see in tropical climates,” she said. “We’re starting to witness the progression of this impact in European countries.”

More on health from Agenda

Coronavirus ranked sixth in a list of the world's top concerns, in a new Ipsos survey. It was the top concern at the beginning of this year.

World Polio Day was observed on 24 October in the midst of a resurgence of the disease in various parts of the world, including in areas where it had previously been eliminated.

Africa needs to scale up its vaccine manufacturing capability, for the benefit of the region and the wider world, according to Seth Berkley, CEO of vaccine alliance Gavi. Africa currently produces just 0.1% of the global supply of vaccines.

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