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Why “8 Hours of Sleep” Might Be Making Insomnia Worse (Clinician Guide)

Why “8 Hours of Sleep” Might Be Making Insomnia Worse (Clinician Guide)

Pop Quiz

True or False:

If a patient reports feeling “amazing” after 8–9 hours of uninterrupted sleep following a stressful week, the clinician should help the patient achieve this every night.

(Answer below)

A Story From Training

I’m sitting in the interview room with my psychiatry attending after completing an oral exam testing my clinical skills.

He asked if I was going into a fellowship after training and I replied,

“Yes, I’m applying for sleep medicine.”

“Sleep?!” he exclaimed incredulously.

“We’re supposed to keep our patients awake, not put them to sleep!”

Back then, sleep was not a hot topic the way it is now.

Wearables, “sleepmaxxing,” sleepy girl mocktails, AI-enabled mattresses, influencer podcasts, melatonin in every medicine cabinet—none of this existed.

But to me, it was obvious:

Helping patients sleep is one of the most direct ways to help them feel more alert, awake, and alive.

The Problem: Too Much Sleep Advice

Fast forward to today.

Sleep is everywhere.

And the messaging has shifted—from neglecting sleep to obsessing over sleep.

That might sound like progress.

But there’s a growing concern:

We may be overcorrecting—and making insomnia worse.

The American Academy of Sleep Medicine 2025 Sleep Prioritization Survey found:

76% of respondents have lost sleep due to worries about sleep problems

In other words:

People aren’t just losing sleep.

They’re losing sleep worrying about sleep.

Why This Matters for Clinicians

If your patients are more anxious about sleep than ever…

Then more advice isn’t necessarily the solution.

Better messaging is.

This is where the work of Michelle Jonelis MD becomes highly relevant.

She’s a sleep physician, neurologist, and lifestyle medicine doctor who is reframing how we think—and talk—about sleep in clinical practice.

Watch the Full Discussion

Watch the full video here:

What You’ll Learn (Clinician Takeaways)

  • Why your sleep advice might be making insomnia worse
  • The hidden reason patients feel better after an “8-hour night”
  • What rebound sleep is (and why wearables can mislead patients)
  • Why many adults cannot consistently sleep 8 hours
  • The concept of a sleep set point
  • How to use the SLEEPY acronym to identify what’s disrupting sleep
  • The one word that can reduce sleep anxiety almost immediately
  • And more

Key Concept: What Is Rebound Sleep?

Rebound sleep refers to a temporary increase in sleep duration and depth after a period of:
  • Stress
  • Sleep restriction
  • Illness
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle disruption
Patients often interpret this as:

“This is how I’m supposed to sleep every night.”

But that’s incorrect.

Rebound sleep is not a baseline—it’s a correction.

Trying to replicate it nightly creates:

  • Unrealistic expectations
  • Increased sleep effort
  • Heightened anxiety
  • Worsening insomnia

Clinical Insight: Sleep Is Not a Performance Task

One of the most important reframes:

Sleep is not something patients can force.

It behaves more like a vital sign than a skill.

That means:

  • You can’t “try harder” to sleep better
  • More effort often leads to less sleep
  • The focus should shift from sleep itself → sleep conditions and habits

A Practical Tool: The SLEEPY Acronym

Dr. Jonelis introduces a simple framework to assess sleep in clinic:

SLEEPY

  • S – Safe and settled (stress, hyperarousal)
  • L – Long enough awake (sleep drive)
  • E – Entrainment (circadian rhythm alignment)
  • E – Engagement (mental, physical, social activity)
  • P – Practices (habits, environment, substances)
  • Y – Your sleep opportunity fits your need

Instead of chasing sleep duration, this helps you:

Identify what’s actually disrupting sleep

A Simple Language Shift That Changes Everything

Most clinicians say:

“Sleep is important.”

A more effective version:

“Healthy sleep habits are important.”

Why this works:

  • Sleep itself is not directly controllable
  • Habits are
  • This reduces pressure and performance anxiety

Answer to the Pop Quiz

False.

Those “perfect” 8–9 hour nights are often rebound sleep.

They feel amazing—but they are:

  • Temporary
  • Physiologic
  • Not reproducible nightly

Trying to achieve them consistently leads to:

  • Increased sleep effort
  • Frustration
  • Worse insomnia

Final Takeaway for Clinicians

We’ve spent decades telling patients:

“Get more sleep.”

Now we’re seeing the unintended consequence:

They’re trying too hard—and sleeping worse.

The opportunity moving forward:

  • Shift from quantity to context
  • Shift from control to conditions
  • Shift from sleep to habits

Continue Your Learning

Did you learn something new?

Explore CME and structured learning here:
https://champions.learner.plus/?champion=Dr%20Nishi%20Bhopal

References

1. American Academy of Sleep Medicine. Sleep Prioritization Survey 2025: Losing Sleep to Worries. Published 2025.

More from Dr. Nishi

Why “8 Hours of Sleep” Might Be Making Insomnia Worse (Clinician Guide)
Sleep Health

Why Popular Sleep Tips Make Insomnia Worse

Sleep medicine physician Dr. Michelle Jonelis MD joins Dr. Nishi Bhopal MD to explain how current public sleep messaging can worsen sleep anxiety and insomnia by overemphasizing sleep duration.

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