
More than half of office workers don't consistently get a good night's sleep
Home health aides have long had the distinction of being among the lowest-paid workers in the United States, but now it's revealed they also get the least amount of sleep.
Concern over finances and an overall stressful job may be keeping home health aides up at night; but lawyers also made the list of sleep-deprived occupations.
A new study of professions that get the least and most amount of sleep was commissioned by a mattress company and based on a survey done for the National Center for Health Statistics. The research found health aides, lawyers and police officers got the least sleep, while loggers, hairstylists and sales representatives were the among the most-rested workers.
“We encourage people to take stock of their sleep habits and make improvements where they can,” said Robert Oexman, director of the Sleep to Live Institute in Joplin, Mo., and a consultant for Sleepy's, the mattress company behind the study.
Here’s a rundown of the sleepiest workers based on average amount of sleep per night:
1. Home Health Aides
2. Lawyers
3. Police Officers
4. Physicians, Paramedics
5. Economists
6. Social Workers
7. Computer Programmers
8. Financial Analysts
9. Plant Operators
10. Secretaries
And here are the workers that get the most shut-eye:
1. Forest, Logging Workers
2. Hairstylists
3. Sales Representatives
4. Bartenders
5. Construction Workers
6. Athletes
7. Landscapers
8. Engineers
9. Aircraft Pilots
10. Teachers
Overall, nobody seems to getting a lot of sleep no matter what they do. Even loggers, who topped the list, only clocked an average of seven hours and 20 minutes sleeping, compared with six hours and 57 minutes for the sleepiest workers, home health aides.
Related: Home health care industry fights overtime proposal
What’s so important about getting enough sleep anyway?
Turns out, a lot. Two Harvard Medical School studies found that insomnia does a number on your productivity, and a lack of sleep can affect your health.
You could make up the difference by napping at work. A 2011 study from the National Sleep Foundation and Philips Electronics found that one in four employees admitted taking a nap at work.
That study also found:
- 85 percent of office workers say they could be more productive if they slept more.
- More than half of office workers don't consistently get a good night's sleep.
- Two-thirds of office workers surveyed said lack of sleep means their day begins on a low note.
- Two-thirds of employees do not wake up before their alarm goes off and more than one-third are not ready to get up when their alarm goes off.


I can understand why lawyers don't get enough sleep. I probably wouldn't be able to sleep if I dealt with helping corrupt people either.
Tring to think of ways to charge more.
I usually get 7 solid hours per night. Sometimes more sometimes a bit less. If I get less than 6 I usually feel like I'm operating at less than 100% so I try to avoid that. The hard part is I need to get up at 5:30 in the morning so I need to get to bed at a stupidly early hour to get proper sleep.
With lawyers it probably has a lot to do with them being on-call all the time and getting random phone calls at ungodly hours.
Gotta be guilt.
At my job I work in Finance. If you want to sleep well sometimes, work in Finance it will run you ragged then you'll sleep.
It's not a very quiet world anymore is the real reason I feel I basically have trouble sleeping. I have to go to sleep wearing ear plugs.
Lawyers should learn to put down their vacation brochures and get some sleep,
it's their assisstants that need the rest.
LOL take naps at work!? That is hilarious, obviously the guy who wrote this article has not worked at a job where you have to stay on your feet for 8 hours or longer and get no 15 minute breaks, and only rarely get a 30 min lunch break. That is how all my jobs have been and they all only barely pay more than minimum wage, no matter how hard and honest a worker i am. Combine this with an injury i suffered back in 03 that my body has never fully healed from which makes sleeping very painful and im lucky if i can get 5 hours of sleep a night. Based on my past and current experiences a good night of sleep is a luxury nothing more.
Lawyers stay awake at night trying to figure out how to screw someone the next day. Bunch af leaches. Most politicians are ambulance chasers.