To function reliably, your brain and body need seven to eight hours of sleep each night. Yet one in five adults with ADHD sleeps less than half that much.
On average, they get just five hours and 51 minutes of continuous sleep each night. And it shows.According to a recent ADDitude survey of 2,156 adults with ADHD, poor sleep is as common as it is deleterious.The scorecard is scarcely better for children with ADHD.
They sleep just seven hours and 28 minutes each night, on average, according to 940 caregiver survey responses. Children aged 6 to 12 should get at least nine hours each night, and teenagers should sleep at least eight hours.
Less than half of teens with ADHD hit this benchmark, according to the survey.About one in five children and teens with ADHD go to bed after midnight and 73 percent take 30 minutes or more to fall asleep each night, according to the survey.
Read more on additudemag.com