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EMS ranks among most sleep-deprived occupations in US

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EMS Management Article

February 24, 2012

EMS ranks among most sleep-deprived occupations in US

Survey lists most tiring and most rested professions

Marketwire

HICKSVILLE, N.Y. — Daylight Saving Time is Sunday March 11th, but the real impact of "springing forward" and losing an hour of sleep is felt on the back-to-work Monday. That day, most of us will suffer from sleep deprivation.

But what about the rest of the year? A new ranking conducted for Sleepy's, the Mattress Professionals, points to those jobs where workers report the shortest sleep time. The Shortest-Sleep Jobs list is based on an independent analysis of individual sleep habits as reported in the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS). The data reveals the following sleep patterns among America's workers — none of whom attain the 8- hours we were all taught to strive for. The list is presented with the shortest sleepers at the top.

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

The study also identified the Top 10 occupations generally considered to be the "most well-rested." The jobs with workers who, on average, get the most sleep are presented below, with the most well-rested at the top.

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

Not surprisingly, professions with the least amount of sleep also correlate with some of the most stressful jobs such as those in law enforcement. Although some jobs with shorter sleep correlate with other known rankings, such as most dangerous, certain professions may have their own unique contributing factors:

Lawyers may be up at night worrying about their law school loans. In 2009-2010, the amount borrowed for law school averaged $68,827 for
public law school graduates and $106,249 for private law school graduates.

Stress may be at the heart of Police Officers' short sleep. The occupation was among the top ten most stressful jobs of 2012. In addition, a new study found that 40% had at least one sleep disorder, such as obstructive sleep apnea or insomnia.

Healthcare professionals such as emergency medical technicians and paramedics work on average 180 hours more than the average person each
year and often have to be on call all night, accounting for their shorter sleep time.

At the other end of the scale, those occupations with longer sleep periods include jobs that involve working outdoors, such as construction workers and forestry workers. The daylight-only schedule or just the additional sunlight may allow these workers a few more minutes of sleep each night. In addition, it is worth noting that some of the most well-rested occupations correlate with the least stressful job rankings according to CareerCast.com's annual list, such as hairstylists, who fall neatly into the "personal care and service" category.

"No matter your occupation, stress level or whether you work outdoors or at a desk, Daylight Saving Time offers an important reminder of the effects quality sleep can have on the workforce," said Dr. Robert Oexman, of the Sleep to Live Institute and consultant to Sleepy's. "We encourage people to take stock of their sleep habits and make improvements where they can."

Copyright 2012 Marketwire, Inc.

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Comments
The comments below are member-generated and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of EMS1.com or its staff.
Jayme Hancock Jayme Hancock Friday, February 24, 2012 4:49:21 PM No rest for the wicked...how do both of my career interests end up in the top 10 for sleep deprivation? brb redbull.
Luke Bourke Luke Bourke Sat Feb 25 06:07:00 PST 2012 RED LIGHT fever???
Andrew Wilmoth Andrew Wilmoth Friday, February 24, 2012 6:03:17 PM I don't know how lawyers and home heath rank above police and EMS.
Pascal Hay Pascal Hay Fri Feb 24 18:58:46 PST 2012 I can't tell you how many times we responded at 0300 hours to find a lawyer and a home health person waiting to open the front door for us. LOL.
David Adams David Adams Friday, February 24, 2012 6:13:41 PM We who have been in these professions have known this for years!
Jeff McCormack Jeff McCormack Friday, February 24, 2012 6:19:28 PM Production foreman at an OEM
Will Steele Will Steele Friday, February 24, 2012 6:21:45 PM I'm curious as to why firefighters weren't on the list, we are just as sleep deprived if not more so than police officers.
Barry Scheerer Barry Scheerer Fri Feb 24 18:38:21 PST 2012 kidding rt
Fish Aka Brett Dragun Fish Aka Brett Dragun Fri Feb 24 19:09:21 PST 2012 Tough getting sleep between having a station, working out on the job, and cooking. I understand.
Trey Hoshall Trey Hoshall Fri Feb 24 19:31:46 PST 2012 Where I'm from when EMS goes out we go out, but when we have a fire EMS only comes if someone is hurt. I will trade you 1 working fire for a full code anyday!
Fish Aka Brett Dragun Fish Aka Brett Dragun Fri Feb 24 19:51:57 PST 2012 EMS transports, fire shows up. Fire makes more $, there aren't that many fires compared to medical calls. Codes are the best calls, free cardio and no thinking.
Gregory Heath Roberts Gregory Heath Roberts Fri Feb 24 20:47:45 PST 2012 I respect firemen but why are firemen in a combined fire/ems system usually upset when they get put on an ambulance? Probably because the ambulance misses much more meals, sleep and downtime than the guys on an engine. Cops don't work 24's but they do deal with more turds than the guys on the engine.
Kevin Young Kevin Young Sat Feb 25 05:07:55 PST 2012 HA. Good sense of humour. FF eat till they are sleepy and sleep till they are hungry.
Luke Bourke Luke Bourke Sat Feb 25 06:05:53 PST 2012 If you look at the Results of the study you can tell it's flawed. It says Paramedics but not EMT's. No mention of convenience store clerks, truck drivers, and fire fighters. Night shift people loose sleep because of the fact most people can't sleep well during the day or they try and live a "Normal" life. Having worked 24 and night dispatch, I know how hard it is. At one point I was going to school 2 nights a week, doing ride outs, working 24's and night dispatch 1 or 2 nights a week. I made a mistake on a call because of being tired. I was pulling a extra day shift after coming off a 24... Get your rest, in EMS working 24's you can all-most live a normal life... grab a nap on your days off...
Mike Moses Mike Moses Sat Feb 25 06:12:27 PST 2012 I suspect that police who work the night shift--especially mids--do what a lot of night shift workers do and spend too much time doing daytime stuff at the expense of sleeping a full 8 hours. Firefighters typically work 24s and may get a full night's sleep. Firemedics in a busy station may however get little rest at night if they are on the rescue shift--hopefully there are enough staff so that only a few folks run the ambulance while the others can sleep and there are not a lot of calls that require the engine to respond.
Jeremy Barker Jeremy Barker Friday, February 24, 2012 6:52:33 PM as a emt 80 % of my station are also vol firefighters and my cousin works as a vol fire fighter so I no he is tired. as am I.
Gary Dubinsky Gary Dubinsky Friday, February 24, 2012 7:01:36 PM What about Publlic Safety Dispatchers / 9-1-1 dispatchers/call takers. I worked midnights for 32 years doing this as well as 25 years on the ambulance. Do you think we got alot of rest? Double shifts, forced shifts, working 16 hours, off a few back for 16 more, trying to eat your meal without even leaving the desk...what's a lunch break? We never seem to make these lists...and of course we don't have ANY stress...right?
Luke Bourke Luke Bourke Sat Feb 25 06:10:37 PST 2012 You tell them Gary!!
Jim Lindsay Jim Lindsay Friday, February 24, 2012 7:09:42 PM One of those 3:00AM calls to a bar where an athlete has suffered a mental breakdown after nearly beating a cocaine snorting lawyer half to death for hitting on his hair stylist girlfriend.
Debbie Bicker Debbie Bicker Friday, February 24, 2012 8:13:00 PM When I worked on the trucks we got to sleep between calls. Now that I work the Home Health and have to work all night we don't get to sleep because we are cleaning or taking care of the pt that can't sleep.
Luke Bourke Luke Bourke Sat Feb 25 06:29:36 PST 2012 They also forgot Hospital patients. They get woke up every couple hours to to take their meds, taking vitals, drawing blood and a sleeping pill... Of course if that Patient is a EMT, the nursing staff gets mean as the EMT gets better and starts trying to direct his care... (0-jk)
Craig Stephenson Craig Stephenson Friday, February 24, 2012 8:18:07 PM Lawyers? Must be the guilt keeping them awake.....
Kyle Foster Kyle Foster Fri Feb 24 20:20:08 PST 2012 lol nice
Luke Bourke Luke Bourke Sat Feb 25 06:09:16 PST 2012 Mine get's 25% of my disability pay. He has to make a few calls and do some paper work every 3 months... I hope he tosses and turns more than me at night...
Robert Makosky Robert Makosky Saturday, February 25, 2012 2:36:40 AM Trucking is the number one stressful job in the world. Driving a vehicle that's longer than a house through highways, streets & backroads full of bad drivers somtimes in knee deep snow at night in a strange town because some one won't have a job or some one doesn't eat or disaster victims go without necessities and the hospitals run out of medical supplies and the grocery store shelves are low if that Truck driver doesn't make it on time. That's not just in the U.S. that's all over the world, also in countries like Russia the truck drivers are pulled over by police and robbed by the very people who should protect them, the police in Russia extort money from Truckers. As for sleep depravation that's probably number one as well. Deadlines demanded by customers are difficult to make. Nextime you're reading that book that you purchased from the mall, think about the truck driver who finally made it to the mall before the deadline in the snow and dragged those pallets of books to the rear of the truck, climbed down off the rear of the truck and stacked those books on a two wheeled dolly and wheeled them into the bookstore, making at least 10 to 20 trips in snow and ice.
Luke Bourke Luke Bourke Sat Feb 25 06:17:05 PST 2012 Done that also Robert, I had rather pull a double 24 after a night dispatch shift after fighting a fire with my VFD than go back to OTR trucking... But considering I'm disabled now I would rather do anything than to sit around in pain, on drugs and still having a messed up sleep schedule...
Robert Makosky Robert Makosky Sat Feb 25 10:49:37 PST 2012 Luke Bourke I hear you brother, I spent 27 years and racked up 1.3 million miles driving trucks and I would like to do something else for a living, I'm driving a school bus and doing patient transfers now. I also am a volunteer EMT for Roanoke County Fire and Rescue and involved in Search and Rescue work. Trucking can tax the body. Thanks for the kind reply.
Dee Templeton Wilson Dee Templeton Wilson Saturday, February 25, 2012 5:36:38 AM I typically think EMS should be top of list.
Luke Bourke Luke Bourke Saturday, February 25, 2012 5:51:00 AM So only Paramedics are sleep deprived, and people wonder why I never wanted to be more than a EMT!
Mike Blanford Mike Blanford Saturday, February 25, 2012 7:40:20 AM Lawyers? What a joke, they are the scum of the earth. They don't lose sleep for screwing anyone.
Mike Blanford Mike Blanford Saturday, February 25, 2012 7:40:33 AM Lawyers? What a joke, they are the scum of the earth. They don't lose sleep for screwing anyone.
Lloyd Seawright Lloyd Seawright Saturday, February 25, 2012 7:59:03 AM Life in the SUCK!
Tim Tucker Tim Tucker Saturday, February 25, 2012 8:21:42 AM yeah, how does a home health aide rank above anything. most of their job requires is giving a bath and taking vital signs. if something is wrong they call someone else. what have I missed here.
Shannon Kobe Shannon Kobe Saturday, February 25, 2012 10:56:53 AM Sleep Depravation is one of the key contributors to Post Traumatic Stress woundings received in front line First Responder EMS/Fire and Law Enforcement Work. It is plain to see.....more information located on the web site firefighterveteran.com shannon pennington executive director North American Firefighter Veteran Network.
Kristi OBrien Kristi OBrien Saturday, February 25, 2012 12:11:19 PM I can't recall the last time I got a full uninterrupted 8 hours of sleep! It's one of the downfalls to many jobs. We don't do what we do for a full nights sleep or for the money!
David Adams David Adams Saturday, February 25, 2012 7:05:00 PM Trey, Do you go on medical transfers 4-6 hours away (each way!) sometimes twice in one shift? I doubt it... That said, I also wonder why Fire wasn't mentioned? As far as I am concerned we are all in the same boat with the exception that paid fire is better paid than paid EMS many, if not most places.
Priscilla Avery Priscilla Avery Monday, February 27, 2012 3:01:44 AM Well I for one would really like to know why the men and women that fight to keep us safe n free r not on the list. N for that matter at the very top of the list. With that said thanks to all the men n women out there that puts there lives on the line everyday n to there families my god be with Yall all while ur apart n bring ur loved ones home safely. God bless the USMC ;)
Michele Renee' Clark Michele Renee' Clark Monday, February 27, 2012 10:30:19 AM Well after being up all night most EMS, Fire and Police officers go to their part time job because not only are we short on sleep but we are just as short on pay. You can sleep when your dead takes on a whole new meaning
Ryan Oke Ryan Oke Tuesday, February 28, 2012 3:16:45 PM where does military come into play last time I checked I'm getting 3 hrs of sleep a night.
Bernard B. Laguit Bernard B. Laguit Saturday, March 03, 2012 5:59:42 AM the fact is when your on duty.. even if there's no call, taking a singular minute of nap is impossible... the mind is always presumptuous you might miss one and might cause your whole career... just thingkin the safest side.. lolz
Wayland Slater Wayland Slater Saturday, March 17, 2012 1:36:05 PM Shortly after graduating high school (I became an EMT-A the summer between my Jr. and Sr. years) and volunteering for 11 months at a very rural one unit service I was hired by a private ambulance serv. in a city of a little less than 20,000 and covered the entire county. This was in '84. When I started it was 24/6. You got 24 hours off per week. You and 2-4 "full timers" lived at the ambulance building. Anywhere you went or what you did you took an ambulance. Luckily we did have several "part timers" (paid/call) that hung around the station. To make a long story short, it was nothing to be up and going 32 hrs. straight, get 3-5 hr. "nap", then turn around and do another 24 hrs. We were young (most of us) ambitious, true trauma junkies. For me personally, I've fought insomnia my entire life, so it might not of effected me as much as some others. I was also naive. I thought I was "paying my dues" to become a Paramedic, which I did. I will say that I, and some others, had got to where we should have been admitted for exhaustion. And now that I am older I will admit that during my career between that service and then I had got on a paid Fire Dept., and a few "short time" services I worked at, has taken a toll. At one period my "record" was 56 hrs. My partner, Brad started two hours before me. I would not advise it. You will not dig it. It's not only sleep deprovation, but take advantage of just rest time. It's been a life time ago that we had worked like that and I know things have changed. For those of you who feel like you "need" that action as often as possible, SLOW down. Pace yourself. Know your limitations, and respect them. Don't take your down time for granted. You never know that the c.
Paul Tannahill Paul Tannahill Sat Mar 17 20:24:59 PDT 2012 I done the same thing in the same small town (during my senior year of high school) and it is a feeling I will never forget as long as I live the feeling of joy and happiness to help the community I grew up in
Carissa Hermoso Elegido Carissa Hermoso Elegido Wednesday, March 21, 2012 9:47:42 PM lawyers? really?
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