Sleep is essential for immune regulation: people sleeping fewer than 6 hours per night are four times more likely to develop a cold when exposed to a virus than those sleeping 7 or more hours.
Sleep is not passive rest — it is an active period of immune regulation. During sleep, the body produces and deploys cytokines, T cells, and natural killer cells. Sleeping fewer than 6 hours per night quadruples the risk of catching a cold when exposed to a rhinovirus. Chronic sleep deprivation also reduces vaccine efficacy and increases systemic inflammation.
A landmark 2015 study by Prather et al. in Sleep directly exposed 164 healthy adults to rhinovirus after monitoring their sleep for one week. Those sleeping fewer than 6 hours per night were 4.2 times more likely to develop a cold than those sleeping 7 or more hours, after controlling for stress, socioeconomic status, and other confounders. Besedovsky et al. (2012) demonstrated that slow-wave (deep) sleep is particularly important for immune memory consolidation — the process by which the immune system 'remembers' pathogens and vaccine antigens. Irwin (2019) in Nature Reviews Immunology showed that sleep loss increases pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-6, TNF-alpha, CRP) and reduces natural killer cell activity, creating a state of chronic low-grade inflammation.
"Participants who slept fewer than 6 hours per night were 4.2 times more likely to develop a cold compared to those who slept 7 hours or more."
— Prather et al., Sleep 2015
The NIH National Institute on Aging identifies sleep as a critical component of healthy ageing and notes that insomnia is the most common sleep problem in adults aged 60 and older. The NIA recommends 7–9 hours of sleep per night for most adults, and notes that poor sleep quality — not just duration — is associated with increased risk of chronic disease. Cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) is recommended as the first-line treatment, ahead of sleep medications.
Prioritising 7–9 hours of sleep per night is one of the most effective immune-supporting interventions available. Consistent sleep and wake times (even on weekends) regulate the circadian rhythm that governs immune cell deployment. Avoiding alcohol within 3 hours of bedtime is important — alcohol fragments sleep architecture and suppresses REM sleep, impairing immune memory consolidation. If you have chronic insomnia, CBT-I has a 70–80% success rate and is more effective than sleep medication long-term.
Vitaei verdict
Sleep is a primary immune regulator. Consistently sleeping fewer than 6 hours per night substantially increases infection risk and chronic inflammation. This is Tier I evidence.
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