Fortune | FORTUNE 13小时前
A dangerous sleep condition impacts over 25 million Americans. Climate change could make it more widespread
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一项新研究表明,气候变暖与阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)的发生概率增加存在关联。研究分析了来自29个国家的116,620名参与者的睡眠数据,发现较高气温导致OSA的发生概率增加45%。OSA不仅影响健康,还对经济造成负面影响,可能导致生产力下降和旷工增加,预计全球经济损失可能高达数十亿美元。研究人员强调,如果不采取有力措施减缓全球变暖,OSA的负担到2100年可能会翻倍。

🌡️研究发现,气温升高与阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)的发生概率增加有关。研究表明,较高的环境温度会导致OSA的发生概率增加45%。

😴OSA是一种睡眠障碍,患者在睡眠时会反复停止和开始呼吸,可能导致多种健康问题。未经治疗的OSA会增加患痴呆症、帕金森病、高血压、心血管疾病、焦虑和抑郁的风险,甚至缩短寿命。

💰OSA不仅对健康构成威胁,还会对经济产生负面影响。由于OSA影响情绪和精力水平,导致生产力下降和旷工增加。研究估计,2023年全球变暖导致OSA发病率增加,造成了29个国家损失了788,198个健康生命年,并导致了2500万个旷工日,经济损失达300亿美元。

🌍研究人员警告说,由于研究参与者主要来自发达国家,且拥有睡眠追踪设备和使用降温工具,因此研究结果可能低估了潜在的健康和经济负担。随着全球气温持续升高,OSA的影响可能会进一步恶化。

Do you know if you snore or not? Maybe you had a partner or family member deliver the surprising (or not) news, or perhaps you have had sleepless nights listening to someone else’s snores. Snoring can often be a sign of obstructive sleep apnea, the most common sleep-related breathing disorder estimated to impact over 25 million U.S. adults. It causes people to repeatedly stop and start breathing while they sleep, when the throat muscles relax and block the airway, according to the Mayo Clinic.

A seemingly unrelated phenomenon could be worsening this potentially dangerous sleep disorder, according to recent research: climate change. A new study published in Nature Communications found that warmer temperatures caused participants to have a 45% higher probability of having obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) on a given night.

“Overall, we were surprised by the magnitude of the association between ambient temperature and OSA severity,” said lead author Bastien Lechat at Flinders University Health and Medical Research Institute in Australia in the press release.

That can have not only worrying implications for health, but also the economy: OSA is associated with significant decreases in workplace productivity and absenteeism, and as it becomes more prevalent with rising temperatures, that could cost the global economy $30 billion in lost productivity, and another $68 billion from worsened well-being.

Researchers analyzed sleep data of 116,620 participants across 29 countries over 3.5 years, using a Food and Drug Administration-cleared OSA monitor to establish the link between daily ambient temperature and nightly OSA status.

“Higher rates of diagnosis and treatment will help us to manage and reduce the adverse health and productivity issues caused by climate related OSA,” coauthor Danny Eckert said in the press release.

The health toll of obstructive sleep apnea and climate change

As OSA is exacerbated by warming temperatures, that can lead to detrimental health impacts. Untreated or severe cases of OSA can increase the risk of dementia, Parkinson’s disease, hypertension, cardiovascular disease, anxiety and depression, and even a shorten your lifespan. People with OSA may also suffer from frequent fatigue and mood swings, caused by continually disrupted sleep from breathing interruptions that inhibits settling into a deep, restorative sleep.

Poor sleep is also linked to faster brain aging, decreased cognitive functioning, worsened mental health, inflammation, cardiovascular disease, and a suppressed immune system.

Higher ambient temperatures also have well-established negative effects on health, including worsened mental well-being and overall worsened sleep quality and duration. Previous research shows that warmer temperatures overall magnify the impacts of OSA, as warmer temperatures lead to lighter sleep stages and more frequent disruptions and awakenings.

The economic burden of OSA

In the study, researchers estimated that the global warming-related increases in OSA prevalence in 2023 was associated with a loss of 788,198 healthy life years in 29 countries.

Given how OSA impacts mood and energy levels caused by disrupted sleep, it’s common that people experience lower productivity and more frequent missed days at work. But if OSA frequency and severity continues to increase, that could be catastrophic for the global economy. In 2023, researchers observed that the increase in OSA led to an additional 25 million absenteeism days across the 29 studied countries, leading to an economic cost of $30 billion from the lost labor.

Researchers caution that the study population likely underestimates the potential health and economic burden: All participants owned a sleep tracking device and resided in highly developed countries with greater access to heat-mitigating tools like air conditioning, leaving lower socioeconomic groups with the greatest heat burden underrepresented.

With the mean global temperatures projected to increase by 2.1°C to 3.4 °C, the impacts of heat are likely to worsen.

“Our findings highlight that without greater policy action to slow global warming, OSA burden may double by 2100 due to rising temperatures,” Lechat said.

“Going forward, we want to design intervention studies that explore strategies to reduce the impact of ambient temperatures on sleep apnea severity as well as investigate the underlying physiological mechanisms that connect temperature fluctuations to OSA severity,” Eckert added.

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气候变化 睡眠呼吸暂停 OSA 健康 经济
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