Sleep Trackers: Do They Help? Should You Get One?

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Many of my new clients tell me that they have been using sleep trackers and sleep apps that promise to measure sleep.  They aren’t always certain that the information they receive is accurate or even useful.  They want to know my opinion(s).  And anyone that knows me is aware that if you ask my opinion, you will absolutely receive it.  In detail.

Well…..

These are mostly either apps that sense your body movement while you are in bed, or wearables that monitor your heart rate, breath rate, and more.  Some are attached to CPAP machines.  What they DON’T measure is what a somnograph does:  brainwaves.

They can’t measure brainwave activity.  That happens in a sleep clinic.

This means that your app and your wearables are using secondary signs of sleep to provide feedback about your sleep.  Not getting the whole story makes taking action harder.

This is like checking the shelves in a store to measure whether the business is making money or not.  Something is selling.  Money is changing hands.  Whether or not profit is being made can’t be definitively determined by shelf stock numbers.  You have to look “under the hood” to know for sure.

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This means that you need to take an app’s/wearable’s interpretation with a grain of salt and interpret the interpretation.  This confuses people, and they often prefer to take the readouts and the interpretations at face value. Do that, and you could end up with inaccurate beliefs about the quality of your sleep.  In both directions.  Without somnography, we have to look at your subjective sense of being rested and renewed, your sleep diary and compare it  with your chronotype, and your overall ability to function during the day.

This is one of the best reasons to get a sleep coach.  We drill down and work with you so that you can eventually do your own assessment of your sleep.  You learn so much about sleep that you can figure out how to tweak things months after we finish our CORE sessions.

Being able to look “under the hood”  tells us a lot more about the quality of your sleep than a sleep tracker can offer you.  After all, the older you get, the more likely it is that your sleep issues are complicated.  There is no way that a movement sensor or a breath counter is going to help you solve a complex problem.

So What Can a Sleep Tracker/Sleep App Do?

  1. Motivate you.  Some people like to have numbers.  They like something to record or graph.
  2. Provide information to your doctor or sleep coach.  They have the training to interpret the interpretations.
  3. Give you early warnings that your new sleep plan isn’t working, or your new medication/ CPAP machine isn’t giving you the results you want.
  4. Remind you how important sleep is to your health.  Life is complicated.  Keeping sleep as a priority isn’t easy when you are being pulled in a million directions.  Your app/wearable is a reminder that sleep is important.

Want more information about sleep coaching?  Get in touch with me!

 

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Author: Cathy Collyer

I am a licensed occupational therapist, licensed massage therapist, and certified CBT-i sleep coach in private practice in the NYC area. I have over 25 years of professional experience in adult and pediatric treatment. It has been a joy to help people of all ages improve their ability to grow and thrive! Occupational therapists are focused on enhancing a client's functioning in everyday life. We are practical healthcare providers, interested in teaching, adapting actions and environments, and building a client's useful skills for living their best life, regardless of their challenges. I am the author of five books, including "Staying In The Room: Managing Medical And Dental Care When You Have DID" and "The Practical Guide To Toilet Training the Autistic Child". I lecture on many subjects, including sleep, trauma, and development. Contact me to learn more about how I can help you achieve YOUR goals!

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