Held hostage by nocturnal anxieties, I dutifully surrender my Apple Wallet for sleep apps promising eight hours of REM rejuvenation. Wide-eyed at 3 a.m., I perversely enjoy scrolling the nightly metrics revealing just how distant from that nirvana I remain.
I’m learning my obsession with midnight tracking is making things worse.
Especially for the aging consumer, relentless sleep auditing can breed an insidious neurosis.
Recent scientific research offers a more sober perspective on sleep requirements, challenging the rigid view that everyone requires eight hours per night to avoid cognitive decline. A landmark study published recently in Nature, co-authored by Dr. Junhao Wen of Columbia Radiology and the New York Genome Center, mapped a U-shaped architectural nexus of human aging.
Examining the UK Biobank data set of half a million adults across 23 distinct biological aging “clocks” spanning 17 organ systems, the researchers discovered that a general population golden mean to lower the risk of multi-organ decay and early death sits between 6.4 and 7.8 hours of sleep daily. Venture outside this boundary, sleeping fewer than six hours or, curiously, more than eight, and the body’s cellular odometer quickens.
Health outcomes settled within a flexible range, proving that ideal sleep duration varies by organ, sex, and demographic population.
Yet the sleep-industrial complex — sleep tech alone is projected to grow from US $20.5 billion (U.S.) in 2024 to $64.7 billion by 2033 — flattens this highly variable biological truth into an uncompromising statistic, preaching the gospel of the eight-hour monolith to suckers like me.
But we all know the math. We all suffer the vascular consequences of sleeplessness.
What the celebrity peddlers of sleep tech, habit-forming over-the-counter nostrums, and even well-intentioned sleep evangelists fail to grasp is that hour-counting is the new sleep shaming. Among them is Dr. Matthew Walker, a professor of bioengineering and behavioural and brain sciences at UT Dallas, who famously terrified millions of Joe Rogan’s listeners in 2018 by equating short sleep to a fast-tracked death warrant.
Yet the eight-hours-a-day mantra misses a human reality.
For any of us managing the topography of a changing body and bathroom frequency, this constant hectoring backfires. It births orthosomnia, a preoccupation with achieving an idyllic night of continuous rest. It is a condition I know intimately.
The glowing screen of the sleep tracker frowns indictment. I spend the small hours of the morning alert, meticulously documenting my failure to sleep, my cortisol spiking in proportion to my device’s disapproval.
“Sleep guidelines are best interpreted as flexible ranges that should be tailored to an individual’s medical history and circumstances, especially for older adults and those with comorbidities or fragmented sleep,” Dr. Wen counsels.
“In our Nature study, the lowest estimated biological aging in the UK Biobank occurred around 7.4–7.8 hours/day,” Wen says, “but this ‘sweet spot’ can vary across individuals and may shift across populations. When commercial sleep metrics fuel ‘sleep shaming’ and anxiety, that stress can itself undermine sleep quality and overall health.”
So much of the sleep-counseling market fails because it peddles a punitive cure for a “broken” night rather than helping us manage the reality of aging. It demands a pristine sleep flow that biology denies to anyone with comorbidities.
Dr. Michael Mak, a staff psychiatrist and sleep medicine specialist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH), observes this daily.
“While consumer sleep tracking technology can be helpful for health reasons, we should avoid rigid sleep optimization and lean toward individualized sleep health: patterns, function, symptoms, and quality of life matter more than a single nightly score,” says Mak.
“Especially in older adults, the goal should not be perfect sleep architecture as judged by an app, but sustainable routines that support daytime well-being.”
Herein lies the entrepreneurial opportunity. The sleep industry can pivot from the authoritarian surveillance of the digital wristband and toward individual experimentation, dignity and choice.
Consider the insights of Jessica Yang, CEO and Co-Founder of Tochtech Technologies, whose company deploys passive, non-wearable smart monitoring under the mattress to extract sleep data to assist senior care providers.
“We’ve seen many older adults sleep in very different ways and still live healthy, independent lives,” says Yang.
“Sleep is also often the first sign of health changes, which is why sleep tracking can be useful — but it should be non-invasive and avoid creating anxiety around sleep. When we measure sleep, we analyze the quality of sleep including sleep stages, cycles and efficiency. What we often see is that sleep naturally fluctuates like waves — people may sleep less one night and recover the following night — which suggests that healthy sleep is far more dynamic and individualized than a fixed nightly target.”
For older adults, especially those living in care homes, Yang’s data shows there are myriad factors affecting sleep: reduced daytime activity, excessive daytime napping, and multiple medications.
I say we switch off the hall monitors, in the form of sages or apps, who lecture us about sleep.
It is time for the market to abandon the blunt instrument of the eight-hour edict and embrace the nuanced, idiosyncratic rhythms of human life.
Beautiful at rest and also when interrupted at night.