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Sleep hygiene may be HR’s next big mental health push, as 58% of U.S. workers say they regularly struggle to get quality sleep

By
Paige McGlauflin
Paige McGlauflin
and
Joey Abrams
Joey Abrams
Down Arrow Button Icon
By
Paige McGlauflin
Paige McGlauflin
and
Joey Abrams
Joey Abrams
Down Arrow Button Icon
November 20, 2023, 8:22 AM ET
A sleepless night can decrease workplace productivity the following day.
A sleepless night can decrease workplace productivity the following day.Maria Korneeva—Getty Images

Good morning!

Addressing mental health at work has emerged as one of the most important issues HR teams are tackling these days, offering perks like quiet rooms or on-site therapists. HR teams may also want to support employees with a mental health-adjacent effort that usually happens outside the confines of an office: sleep.

Over half (58%) of U.S. adults say they regularly struggle to get a good night’s sleep, according to a survey of more than 1,000 American workers from meditation and mental health platform Headspace. While the CDC recommends that working-age adults (age 18 to 60) get more than seven hours of sleep per night, 63% of surveyed U.S. adults say they sleep less than six hours per night. Stress and financial pressures are the top two factors affecting workers’ sleep quality.

Why should employers care? Well, 72% of respondents agree that a bad night’s sleep tanks their productivity the next day, citing feeling distracted (61% of respondents), failing to accomplish goals (42%), and even calling out sick (25%). 

“Even though we don’t talk about it in a corporate environment, not having slept well puts you in a situation where you can’t perform well. And 25% of people missing a day at work clearly has a significant impact on productivity,” Karan Singh, Headspace’s chief people officer, tells Fortune.

About one-quarter of American respondents say that if they could improve just one aspect of their life to benefit their mental and physical health, they’d select sleep. And 77% say consistent quality sleep would improve their mental health.

In some ways, addressing sleep quality may be a lower entry barrier for workers interested in seeking mental health care but still reluctant to take the plunge. Headspace, which serves more than 4,000 employers across 200 countries, says it has seen increased interest in its sleep quality content, noting that it’s sometimes easier for employees to simply say, “I didn’t sleep so well last night” instead of disclosing they want mental health care. “It’s a lightweight…entry point to get access to care,” Singh says.

While offering sleep hygiene tools can be helpful, people leaders should also establish a culture that decreases stress levels, such as minimizing the amount of work employees must address late in the evening.

According to Headspace’s 2023 workforce attitudes toward mental health report, 89% of employees surveyed say they’ve felt moderate to extreme stress over the past month, with 49% saying they feel a sense of dread at least once per week. Respondents point to instability and unpredictability at work, overwhelming expectations to take on more job responsibilities, and higher expectations and fear of not meeting them as the top three drivers of their dread.

“It is about the context and the culture that HR leaders can set,” says Singh. “If there is a culture of responding to email, all day, every day, all night, every night, then more often than not, that’s going to likely lead to runaway thoughts and challenges with stress and eventually trying to get to sleep.”

Paige McGlauflin
paige.mcglauflin@fortune.com
@paidion

Reporter's Notebook

The most compelling data, quotes, and insights from the field.

As I reported on Friday, the hospitality industry has yet to reach pre-pandemic levels of employment after losing well over 8 million jobs in March and April 2020. 

Now, some restaurants are deploying service robots—designed to assist frontline service with things like delivering food to tables—to alleviate the strain caused by human labor shortages. But bringing robots into the workforce isn’t as simple as just procuring them; companies must also train staffers to work alongside robots and ensure the physical workspace is free of obstacles that might slow service down.

Around the Table

A round-up of the most important HR headlines.

- Amazon’s corporate employees may lose out on promotion opportunities if they fail to follow return-to-office mandates. CNBC

- Medical expenses will likely rise next year as more employers offer coverage for weight loss and diabetes drugs like Wegovy. U.S. employers believe they’ll pay an extra 5.2% for these costs in 2024. Reuters

- Some banks are using AI to automate parts of the employee review process and draft job descriptions. Bloomberg

- Hundreds of employees in Amazon’s Alexa business received layoff notifications last week as the tech giant redirects resources to generative AI. Business Insider

Watercooler

Everything you need to know from Fortune.

In practice, not paper. In-person mentoring and internal promotions might be some of the “unspoken rules” employers use to bring employees into the office next year. —Jane Thier

Slow to a stop. The chief executive at Boston-based Altimeter Capital thinks AI will displace more workers than any other event in capitalism’s history by gradually slowing hiring rates to a halt. —Steve Mollman

Post pushback. The top doctor at NYU Langone Health’s cancer center filed a lawsuit against the hospital and New York University, claiming he was fired last week for reposting social media content that “criticized people who supported the violence toward and death of Israelis.” The center did not immediately respond with a comment. —David Voreacos, Bloomberg

This is the web version of CHRO Daily, a newsletter focusing on helping HR executives navigate the needs of the workplace. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.

About the Authors
By Paige McGlauflin
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By Joey AbramsAssociate Production Editor

Joey Abrams is the associate production editor at Fortune.

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