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Home - Opinion - The Quiet Cost of Sleepless Nights in the Workplace

Opinion

The Quiet Cost of Sleepless Nights in the Workplace

Dr Ryan Copeland
Dr Ryan Copeland
Published: July 7, 2026
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8 Min Read
WhatsApp Image 2026 07 07 at 5.21.26 PM
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I used to call myself a โ€œpoor sleeper.โ€ For years, I assumed it was simply part of who I was, someone who woke up multiple times a night, struggled to fall asleep, and never felt fully rested. During the Covid-19 pandemic, this tendency intensified. The uncertainty, long working hours, and constant digital engagement created a perfect storm. My sleep deteriorated to the point where I felt permanently wired yet exhausted.

Contents
  • Understanding fatigue and the regional sleep crisis
  • Recognising and treating sleep disorders
  • Why sleep matters for employee wellbeing

Eventually, I realised that hoping my sleep would improve on its own wasnโ€™t enough. I needed a structured, science-based approach. I committed to a consistent sleep schedule, stopped eating within three hours of bedtime, kept my room cool, and made early morning sunlight a non-negotiable part of my routine. These simple but evidence-based interventions transformed my sleep. Today, I fall asleep faster, stay asleep longer, and wake up feeling genuinely restored.

This personal journey mirrors what many employees across the region experience: everyday tiredness that gradually becomes chronic fatigue, reduced performance, and declining wellbeing. Understanding the difference, and knowing when to intervene, is essential for both individuals and organisations.

Understanding fatigue and the regional sleep crisis

Feeling tired after a long day is normal. Everyday tiredness typically resolves with rest, hydration, and a good nightโ€™s sleep. Clinical fatigue is different. It is persistent, disproportionate to activity levels, and not relieved by sleep. It often signals underlying issues such as insomnia, sleep apnea, chronic medical conditions, mental health concerns, or lifestyle patterns that disrupt the bodyโ€™s natural rhythms. Everyday tiredness lasts hours, while clinical fatigue can last weeks or months, impairing concentration, mood, and physical functioning in ways that rest alone cannot fix. Recognising this difference early allows for timely intervention and helps prevent long-term health consequences.

This distinction matters especially here. Sleep challenges are widespread across the UAE and GCC, shaped by a combination of environmental and cultural factors. Surveys suggest that 30 to 40 percent of adults in the region report significant sleep difficulties, with insomnia and poor sleep quality especially common. Extreme heat, particularly during summer nights, makes it harder for the body to cool down, a key requirement for falling asleep. Work culture also plays a role, with long working hours, late meetings, and high digital engagement contributing to irregular sleep schedules. Evening screen use delays melatonin release, pushing sleep later into the night, while late-night social habits, often shifted after sunset to avoid the heat, lead to delayed bedtimes. Shift work, common across healthcare, aviation, hospitality, and security, adds a further layer of circadian disruption. Together, these factors create a regional pattern of chronic sleep restriction, which can accumulate into significant fatigue and health risks.

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The consequences reach far beyond feeling groggy. Sleep is not a luxury, it is a biological necessity, and chronic deprivation affects nearly every system in the body. Physically, poor sleep increases the risk of cardiovascular disease, hypertension, and stroke, impairs immune function, raises the likelihood of type 2 diabetes through disrupted glucose metabolism, and contributes to weight gain and hormonal imbalance. Cognitively and emotionally, it reduces concentration, memory, and decision making, increases irritability and emotional reactivity, and raises the risk of anxiety and depression. In the workplace, the effects show up as lower productivity and creativity, increased errors and accidents, and reduced engagement and morale. Sleep is foundational to wellbeing, and without it, even the best wellness programmes struggle to make an impact.

WhatsApp Image 2026 07 07 at 2.29.55 PM
Dr Ryan Copeland, Regional Medical Director, Middle East, International SOS

Recognising and treating sleep disorders

Understanding common sleep disorders helps employees and leaders recognise when professional support is needed. Insomnia involves difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or waking too early, and is often linked to stress, irregular schedules, or poor sleep habits. Sleep apnoea is a condition where breathing repeatedly stops during sleep, causing micro-awakenings and drops in oxygen, with symptoms including loud snoring, daytime sleepiness, and morning headaches. Restless legs syndrome produces an uncomfortable urge to move the legs, especially at night, while circadian rhythm disorders reflect a misalignment between the internal body clock and the external environment, common among shift workers, frequent travellers, and individuals with irregular sleep schedules. These conditions are treatable, but they require proper assessment and targeted intervention.

Improving sleep often requires a combination of behavioural, medical, and environmental strategies, with the most effective approaches being evidence based and personalised. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Insomnia, known as CBT-I, is the gold standard treatment for chronic insomnia. It focuses on restructuring the thoughts, behaviours, and habits that interfere with sleep, using stimulus control, sleep restriction, relaxation techniques, and cognitive reframing. Medical intervention may be appropriate for certain conditions, such as sleep apnoea, which is treated with CPAP, restless legs syndrome, which is treated with specific medications, or short-term insomnia, though medical evaluation is essential before starting any treatment.

Lifestyle modifications are often the most impactful and sustainable changes. These include maintaining a consistent sleep schedule, engaging in regular physical activity, limiting caffeine after midday, avoiding heavy meals close to bedtime, reducing screen exposure in the evening, and getting morning sunlight exposure to anchor circadian rhythms. Sleep hygiene practices reinforce these habits further: keeping the bedroom cool, dark, and quiet, using comfortable bedding, avoiding naps longer than 20 to 30 minutes, creating a calming pre-sleep routine, and reserving the bed for sleep only all contribute to better rest over time.

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Why sleep matters for employee wellbeing

As a medical director, I see firsthand how sleep influences workplace health, safety, and performance. Employees who sleep well are more resilient, more productive, and more engaged. Organisations that prioritise sleep education, fatigue management, and supportive policies, such as flexible scheduling, mental health support, and awareness programmes, see measurable improvements in wellbeing and retention. Sleep is not just an individual responsibility; it is a shared organisational priority.

My own journey from chronic poor sleep to restorative rest taught me that change is possible. With the right knowledge and consistent habits, sleep can improve dramatically. For employees across the UAE and GCC, where environmental and cultural factors make sleep especially challenging, understanding the science of sleep and taking proactive steps is essential. Healthy sleep is the foundation of wellbeing. When we protect it, everything else becomes easier.

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