“It’s Just [Complicated] Sleep”: Discourses of Sleep and Aging in the Media

Author:

Breheny Mary1ORCID,Ross Isabelle2,Ladyman Clare2ORCID,Signal Leigh2ORCID,Dew Kevin3ORCID,Gibson Rosemary24ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Health, Victoria University of Wellington , Wellington , New Zealand

2. Sleep/Wake Research Centre, School of Health Sciences, Massey University , Wellington , New Zealand

3. School of Social and Cultural Studies, Victoria University of Wellington , Wellington , New Zealand

4. School of Psychology, Massey University , Palmerston North , New Zealand

Abstract

Abstract The media are influential in shaping beliefs and attitudes on aging and health-related behaviors. Sleep is increasingly recognized as a key pillar for healthy aging. However, the role of media representations of sleep is yet to be assessed with regard to discourses of aging. Texts from New Zealand’s main free online news source were collated using key words “sleep” together with “aging,” “older,” “elderly,” or “dementia” between 2018 and 2021. Contents of 38 articles were interpreted using critical discourse analysis. Discursive constructions described an inevitable decline of sleep with aging, including impacts of both physiological decline and life stage transitions; sleep’s role as both a remedy and risk for ill health and disease; and the simplification of solutions for self-managing sleep juxtaposed alongside recognition of its complexity. The audience of these complex messages is left in the invidious position of both pursuing sleep practices to prevent age-related decline, whilst also being told that sleep degradation is inevitable. This research demonstrates the complexity of media messaging and the fraught options it offers: good sleep as both a reasonable achievement to strive for and as impossibly idealistic. Findings mirror two predominant health identities available to older people, as responsible for resisting aging or as falling into inevitable decline. This reveals additional expectations around appropriate time use and behaviors with aging. More nuanced messaging that goes beyond sleep as a resource for health and waking productivity is recommended. Acknowledging the complexity of sleep, aging, and society could be the starting point of such adaptation.

Funder

Massey University Research Fund

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,General Medicine

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