A daily nap may boost an elderly woman's risk
of dying, a new study suggests.
In contradiction of numerous past studies that have found that napping may
have health benefits, researchers from the California Pacific Medical Center
Research Institute found that elderly white women who took a daily siesta were
44 percent more likely to die from any cause, 58 percent more prone to dying
from heart problems, and nearly 60 percent more likely to die from
non-cardiovascular or non-cancer causes.
The results -- based on studies done over seven years on more than 8,000
white women aged 69 or older -- held true even if the women were relatively
healthy, the researchers said. However, a little napping seemed to be fine --
participants who napped less than three hours a week showed no increased chance
of death, the team said.
The study, published online in the Journal of the American Geriatrics
Society, also found that these elderly women had a greater mortality risk if
they clocked between nine and 10 hours of sleep each day compared to those who
slept between eight and nine hours.
Still, the researchers said people shouldn't link napping to poor health or
recommend that seniors skip napping. They noted that underlying sleep disorders
or other medical conditions could be leading to daytime drowsiness.
"Since excessive sleep suggests that night time sleep is disrupted,
interventions to treat sleep disorders and improve sleep quality in older women
may reduce mortality risk," co-author Katie L. Stone, a scientist at the medical
center, said in a news release issued by journal's publisher
(Source:
Agencies)