What Doctors Don’t Tell You Australia-NZ – July 22, 2019

(Darren Dugan) #1

0 10 20 50 years of age


34 WDDTY | ISSUE 01 | AUG/SEP 2019 FACEBOOK.COM/WDDTYAUNZ

EVERY PICTURE...

Early to bed and early birds catching the worm—the adages all agree that


being a lark is healthier for us than a late-to-bed owl. But new research suggests


it’s not quite as simple as that


Who’s healthier—


the lark or the owl?


Psychological
problems

94%


From dawn to dusk


Compared to the earliest risers, night owls are at increased risk for many
health conditions (right). But chronotype isn’t a life sentence—we all tend
to be larks in childhood and old age, and owls in adolescence (below). It’s
how we sleep throughout early adulthood and middle age that varies most.
Free download pdf