Napping has been redeemed by health experts, but don't overdo it - Action News
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Napping has been redeemed by health experts, but don't overdo it

Margaret Thatcher, Leonardo da Vinci, even Winston Churchill indulged in napping. It's good for the ticker, and for the mind. Now napping is becoming a popular feature in universities and businesses, but too much of a good thing could also be risky.

'I'm here to change that mentality of feeling guilty of taking a nap,' says nap entrepreneur

Studies say an afternoon nap is healthy for you. It's good for the heart, and the mind. But experts say don't overdo it. A 20-minute snooze is all you need. (Reuters)

It goes by many names. A nap or siesta, snoozing or dozing, a catnap or just catching 40 winks.

Winston Churchill indulged in a good nap, apparently because he believed it allowed him toget more work done during the day.

In a sleep-deprived world, catching a few zzzzzz's has its benefits. Research shows it can do everything from boosting your immune system to improving alertness.

A recentstudy, involving Swiss adults aged 35 to 75, found that a daytime nap taken once or twice a week could lower the risk of heart attackor stroke.

"Sleep is goodfor the brain and for the body," says Dr. Brian Murray, a neurologist at Sunnybrook Hospital in Toronto. Murray and his team run overnight sleep studies in his laboratory at the hospital.

A white man with a medium-length salt-and-pepper beard sits on a hospital bed. He is wearing a dark suit with a patterned tie.
Neurologist Brian Murray runs a sleep lab at Toronto's Sunnybrook Hospital. He says sleep helps improve cognitive function and helps clear junk out of the brain. (Craig Chivers/CBC News)

"Sleep helps improve cognitive function, helps clear junk out of the brain and has benefits systemically in terms of your immune system, endocrine system and your general health."

Despite the health benefitsof napping,researchers have found a nap should not be too long. A studyin the journal Neurology warned that people nappingmore than 90 minutes were 25 per centmore likely to have a stroke.

The study of Chinese adults with an average age of 61showed those who slept longer than nine hours a night, had poor sleep quality and/or took long naps of more than 90 minutes all showed greater risk of stroke.

For older adults, naps over 90 minutes arenot goodit's excessive napping, says Dr. Atul Khullar, medical director of the Northern Alberta Sleep Clinic. He says a short nap can be useful, but longer ones canbe disruptive.

"Excessive naps of 90 minutes, or a couple of hours, almost is a biological emergency. The body is not supposed to be doing that."

Other health experts say, if you need an afternoon siesta, keep in short no more than 20 minutes. Longer than that could make you groggy.

Once frowned upon as a sign of laziness or indulgence, napping is gaining new respect.

In a 24-hour work cycle, where employees are often expected to work long hours, many companies have created nap friendly spaces.

"I think it's a function of a society that is sleep deprived,"says Sunnybrook Hospital's Dr. Murray.

Watch: Some workplaces encourage napping

The health impact of taking a nap

5 years ago
Duration 2:31
More workplaces and schools are becoming nap friendly and its a choice that could be good for your health in small doses.

"Certainly companies would realize that an attentive, alert worker is going to do a better job. And I think improving cognitive function with a nap opportunity is certainly in their best interest."

Mehzabeen Rahman used to work in a job that came with long hours. She and her colleagues were often exhausted. So she created a nap studio inmidtown Toronto that's open 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekdays.

"I'm here to change that mentality of feeling guilty of taking a nap or being kind to yourself,"she says.

'I'm here to change that mentality of feeling guilty of taking a nap or being kind to yourself,' says Toronto entrepreneur Mehzabeen Rahman. She has opened a nap clinic that caters to stressed out employees. (Craig Chivers / CBC News)

The beds in her studio come with sheets, and a pillow, a water bottle and an eye mask. For $10, stressed-outworkers can pop in the studio in Toronto to get a quick nap.

"Right now it's all the white-collar employees all around the area. They're working different fields, technology, investment, doctors, lawyers. So they're the ones who work long hours who need the naps in between," says Rahman.

At an art installation at the University of Toronto, napping is not only encouraged, but celebrated.

Richard Sommer is the dean of Architecture at the University of Toronto. He's currently curating an art installation on campus that celebrates the art of a good nap. (Craig Chivers/CBC News)

The installation is located in the bowels of the building.Participants enter through a felt curtain and enterthe main space that'sbeen replicated to look and feel like a cave. The floors and walls are lined with soft felt that dampens any sound. There are resting areas with large felt-covered chairs where participants can engage inrest, relaxation and meditation.

University of Toronto student Jana Nitschke and her friend Robert Raynor say an afternoon nap is a great way to decompress and take a break from their studies. (Craig Chivers / CBC News)

"We thought, what better place to stage an experiment in slowing down and in being able to take some repose during the day than in a school of architecture,"says Richard Sommer, the dean of the faculty of architecture.

"Our students have become more stressed out and have had increasing levels of anxiety because of our plugged in life," says Sommer.

Robert Raynor, a first-year architecture student, came for quick snoozeto decompress.

"Especially towards the end of the semester, it tends to be relatively stressful work. We work long hours and it's really nice in the middle of the day just take a little bit of a break."