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Sleep
Sleep Environment Optimisation
The bedroom is a tool. Most people are leaving significant sleep quality on the table.
What it is
Sleep environment optimisation means deliberately engineering the physical conditions of your sleeping space: temperature, light, noise, and air quality. Each variable independently affects sleep architecture and recovery depth.
Why it matters
Core body temperature must drop 1β2Β°C to initiate sleep and maintain it. Ambient light β even dim light through eyelids β suppresses melatonin. Noise fragments sleep architecture into lighter stages without you necessarily waking. For someone in cancer treatment, where restorative sleep is essential for immune function, tissue repair, and emotional regulation, a suboptimal sleep environment represents a daily tax on recovery.
The evidence
Research from the National Sleep Foundation and multiple sleep labs shows that room temperatures between 16β19Β°C produce the deepest sleep. A 2010 Harvard study demonstrated that even 8 lux of light during sleep suppresses melatonin by 50%. White or pink noise at moderate volume has been shown in multiple trials to reduce sleep onset time and improve perceived sleep quality.
This information is for educational purposes and does not constitute medical advice. Always discuss lifestyle changes with your care team, particularly if you are undergoing active cancer treatment.
How to practice
Temperature: cool the room to 17β19Β°C. Use a light duvet and socks if cold β warming extremities helps core temperature drop. Light: use blackout curtains or a sleep mask; cover all LED standby lights. Noise: use earplugs or a white/pink noise machine if needed. Phone: charge it outside the bedroom or face-down in another room. Blue light from screens elevates alertness for 1β2 hours after exposure β see the Digital Sunset entry.
Frequency
Every night β it's a permanent setup
Notes
Do not use the bedroom for work, screens, or stressful activity. The brain builds associations. If you associate the bed with lying awake, sleep onset worsens (this is called conditioned arousal β a core CBT-I concept).
Tags
sleep
melatonin
circadian
recovery
environment