Fitbit study links sleep to long-term health

  • August 5, 2024
  • Steve Rogerson

A study using data from Fitbit wearables has shown the effects poor sleep can have on long-term health.

The study, published in Nature Medicine, is based on data from Fitbit users and sheds light on how sleep duration, quality and consistency influence a wide array of health outcomes.

Said to be the largest study of its kind to-date, it results from a collaboration between researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center (www.vumc.org), the NIH’s All of Us (allofus.nih.gov) research programme and Google (www.google.com). This work differs from previous sleep studies, which are often limited in size and scope and rely on self-reported sleep diaries, brief periods with movement monitors, or expensive in-lab sleep studies that cover a short period of time.

Instead, the study (www.nature.com/articles/s41591-024-03155-8) was based on nearly 6.5 million nights of sleep from more than 6700 Fitbit (www.fitbit.com) users participating in the All of Us research programme collected over an average of 4.5 years of wear.

The research looked at the relationships between sleep and the entire spectrum of human disease rather than focusing on a narrow set of health outcomes. Here are key findings from the research on how sleep impacts people’s health:

  • Sleep duration: Every additional hour of sleep was associated with a significantly lower odds of having conditions such as obesity and sleep apnoea. Not just too little but also too much sleep was also found to be associated with various conditions.
  • Sleep stages: The balance of REM, light, and deep sleep shown in Fitbit data seemed to play a crucial role in heart health and mental wellbeing.
  • Restless sleep: Increases in the Fitbit restlessness metric were linked to higher odds of sleep disorders and hypothyroidism.
  • Sleep irregularity: Inconsistent sleep patterns were tied to a wide range of issues involving nearly every organ system. Strong associations with sleep irregularity included high blood pressure, obesity, psychiatric disorders (depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder), and migraine headache.
  • Demographic differences: The study found significant differences in median sleep duration across demographics. For example, women tended to sleep longer than men, and white participants slept longer than black participants. This highlights the need to consider individual factors and potential health disparities when researching and promoting sleep health.
  • Lifestyle role: The study found lifestyle factors such as smoking and alcohol intake were associated with differences in sleep duration. This underscores the interconnectedness of health behaviour and the importance of addressing multiple lifestyle factors for improving sleep and overall well-being.

The study also offered a particularly interesting glimpse into when most people sleep. Participants typically got to sleep around 11:10 pm and got about 6.7 hours of sleep during their main sleep period for the day. There are even a few individuals who have an afternoon nap, at around 2:30pm.

“While this study is not intended to suggest that Fitbit sleep data are a clinical tool, we think some of these insights will show researchers the benefits of using cost-effective sleep monitors and wearables for studying how changes in sleep patterns over time might affect the health of populations at scale,” said a Fitbit statement. “And the study continues to be a wake-up call that consistent sleep is as important as getting enough shut-eye.”