Near-Death Experiences and Sleep Disturbance

Author:

Lindsay Nicole1,O'Sullivan Laura1,Gibson Rosemary,Ladyman Clare2,Tassell-Matamua Natasha1

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, Palmerston North

2. School of Health Sciences, Massey University, New Zealand.

Abstract

Abstract Near-death experiences (NDEs) are nonordinary states of consciousness typically occurring on the brink of death. Sleep changes after NDEs have been described, including shorter sleep duration, longer sleep latency, and more sleep disturbances; however, objective verification is lacking. In this exploratory research, 57 participants took part in a 14-day actigraphy study and were assigned to three groups: those who have had an NDE (n = 26); those who experienced a near-death event but without NDE (n = 12); and those who had never come close to death (n = 19). No significant differences were found between groups for actigraphy data. Paired samples t tests indicated significant differences between subjective and objective measures of sleep onset latency, sleep duration, and sleep efficiency, notably among the NDE group. Findings are indicative of the phenomenon known as sleep state misperception (SSM), which may have clinical implications for the study of NDEs and SSM.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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