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Booze may harm sleep quality and cause you to wake up more frequently
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Updated August 28, 2023
Cutting down — or eliminating — evening alcohol may improve your sleep.
Alcohol is a sedative, so it’s no surprise that wine, beer or cocktails can cause drowsiness and hasten sleep. But the resulting shut-eye isn’t ideal: Initially, alcohol suppresses the rapid-eye-movement (REM) phase of sleep, the dream-filled time thought to play a role in problem-solving and memory formation. Later in the night, as the body metabolizes the alcohol, sleep is often fragmented and poor-quality. These effects are greater when people drink large amounts of alcohol, but research suggests that small amounts can disturb sleep, too. Regular drinking is associated with poor sleep quality, according to data from more than 13,000 twins in a 2022 report in Sleep Advances. For optimal sleep, the Global Council on Brain Health recommends avoiding alcohol several hours before bedtime in its 2016 report “The Brain-Sleep Connection.”
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