Skip to content

Sleep, fatigue and alcohol consumption

< 1 min read

Research on the effects of alcohol on sleep dates back to the late 1930s. The literature described the effects of alcohol on sleep in healthy, non-alcoholic individuals.

For example, studies found that in nonalcoholics who occasionally consume alcohol, both high and low doses of alcohol initially improve sleep, although high doses of alcohol can lead to sleep disturbances in the second half of the nighttime sleep period. In addition, people may rapidly develop tolerance to the sedative effects of alcohol.

Researchers have compared the interactive effects of alcohol with other determinants of daytime sleepiness. Such studies suggest that alcohol interacts with sleep deprivation and sleep restriction to exacerbate the situation.

Sleep, Sleepiness and Alcohol Use (PDF file, loads automatically)

Powered by BetterDocs

Close Popup

Even Bye Bye Booze needs a few cookies,.

However, we try only to activate as few as possible technically necessary cookies so that your visit to this site cannot be tracked as far as possible by third parties. We do not share any information about your visit with anyone.

But even we we do need a few - e.g. to display this legal notice or to care for that you do not have to log in again for each page or see this popup again for each page.

As soon as you click on an external link or video, cookies may be set by the operators of these sites, which we cannot influence. Learn more on our privacy page.


Close Popup