Gender influences many aspects of biology, and sleep is no exception. While this reality has been quietly documented in research for years, it rarely makes it into mainstream conversation about health and wellness. A physician is working to change that with five surprising sleep facts — chief among them, the revelation that women need more sleep than men.
The difference amounts to roughly 20 minutes per night, which might not sound like much but adds up significantly over time. The physician links this disparity to the cognitive demands of multitasking — a mental mode that requires the brain to simultaneously manage and switch between multiple streams of thought and activity. Greater cognitive effort during the day requires greater rest at night.
Sleep onset — how long it takes to fall asleep — provides important clues about overall sleep quality. Most healthy adults take between 10 and 20 minutes to drift off. Anything faster may indicate sleep debt accumulating silently in the background. Anything substantially slower might point toward stress, anxiety, or insomnia — all of which can disrupt sleep quality even when sleep quantity seems adequate.
Dreams, despite feeling meaningful and memorable in the moment, are almost entirely lost upon waking. Roughly 95 percent of dream content evaporates within the first few minutes of consciousness. The brain doesn’t treat dreams as information worth storing in long-term memory, which is why dream journaling — writing notes immediately upon waking — is so important for those who want to remember them.
Two final insights carry real-world implications. Seventeen consecutive hours of wakefulness impairs your cognitive function to a degree comparable to having a 0.05 blood alcohol level — enough to affect judgment and reaction time significantly. And if you supplement with melatonin, consider choosing a very low dose: 0.5 mg mirrors the brain’s own natural output and often works better than the higher doses prominently displayed on store shelves.