Oh boy, do I have good news to share!
Evidence demonstrates that sleeping in on the weekend is a smart idea after 
a tough week at work (or anywhere else). I’ve been known to sleep late myself on 
occasion, but always with a twinge of guilt, since we’re told that it’s better 
to go to sleep and get up at the same time every day. But juggling my job, kids, 
household tasks and other requirements all week sometimes leaves me weary and 
sleep-deprived by Friday afternoon -- and I bet you know exactly how I feel. 
Americans have a sleep debt that makes the national budget deficit look 
minor, warns Matthew Edlund, MD, MOH, an expert on rest, biological clocks, 
performance and sleep based in Sarasota, Florida, and author of the new book, 
The Power of Rest. Sleep is as important to health as 
food and water, and we should stop feeling guilty for allotting time for our 
bodies to rest, recharge and regenerate, he said.
Here’s Proof...
At the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, researchers conducted 
a study of the effect of sleep deprivation on the brain power of 159 healthy 
adults aged 22 to 45. A control group of 17 spent 12 consecutive days in the 
sleep lab -- 10 hours in bed each night for seven nights -- while the others 
spent 10 hours in bed for the first two nights, then were in bed only from 4 
a.m. to 8 a.m. for five consecutive nights. Next, this group was assigned 
randomized amounts of recovery sleep, up to 10 hours per night. 
All participants completed 30-minute computerized tests to assess their 
levels of alertness and neurobehavior performance every two hours while awake -- 
and no one will be surprised to learn that in comparison with those who had 
adequate sleep, people with restricted sleep experienced:
- Impaired alertness
- Shortened attention span
- Reduced reaction time.
Why You Need a Vacation 
But here’s the happy finding: Normal function (alertness and 
performance, as above) was restored in sleep-deprived participants after just 
one solid night of recovery sleep -- 10 hours, or the equivalent of squeezing in 
extra shut-eye on Saturday morning after a long week. (The more recovery sleep, 
the higher the scores.) In contrast, participants whose sleep continued to be 
restricted to an average of four to six hours per night performed poorly on 
tests and continued to get worse as their restricted sleep continued. 
Researchers also warned that even 10 hours of sleep in one night is not enough 
to bounce back if you continually push yourself too hard and burn the candle at 
both ends. Dr. Edlund said that, in fact, many studies have shown that even a 
few weeks of normal sleep won’t make up for a longtime habit of sleep 
deprivation -- and he added that nowadays people rarely know what it’s like to 
feel fully rested. In that case, it is likely to take more than a day -- think 
many weeks, and that’s only if you don’t go back to your old ways -- to 
get back to par... which is why we need to take vacations!
These results were published in the August 2010 issue of the journal 
Sleep.
Just as we don’t expect our bodies to function without adequate nutrition, 
we can’t expect to feel fully fueled and alert without sufficient sleep, Dr. 
Edlund says. The best scenario, of course, is to not allow yourself to become 
sleep-deprived in the first place -- but this is not always possible. Most 
people require seven or eight hours a night to be at their best the next day. 
But when that doesn’t happen, we now know that you can get tremendous benefit 
from snoozing a little longer even for just one morning. It gives your brain 
time to recover and reboot -- you’ll be more focused, productive and energetic 
as a result.
 
