š Too Much Afternoon Nap After 60 Could Be Risky! š²
- MediaFx
- Jul 4
- 2 min read
TL;DR:Ā A big new study shows that older adults (around 60+) who take long, irregular midday napsāespecially between 11āÆAM and 3āÆPMāface a slightly higher risk of dying early within the next 8ā11 years. Short power naps of 20ā30 mins, early in the day, seem okay or even helpful. This trend is probably more a sign of hidden health problems than naps causing harm directly. #Napping #SeniorHealth #MortalityRisk š

Why this matters šāāļø
The research, presented at SLEEPāÆ2025 by Chenlu Gao from Harvard and Mass General, followed 86,565 adults (avg ageāÆ63) using wearable trackers for 7 days and then watched their health for about 8 years.
Findings: Those who napped longer or more variablyāand especially around midday (11āÆAMā1āÆPM or 1āÆPMā3āÆPM)āhad a 20ā30% higher risk of allācause death during followāup.
Metaāanalyses agree: long naps (more than 60 mins/day) can boost allācause death risk by 27% and heart risks by 82%.
Whatās really going on? š§
Longer or irregular naps could be signalsĀ of hidden problems like poor night sleep, sleep apnea, early heart or metabolic issues, inflammation, or even early memory decline.
People who were not getting enough exercise (minimum 150 mins weekly) and also took very long naps showed even higher risk.
Power vs. long naps š”
Short power naps (20ā30āÆmin) early in the day can improve alertness, memory, and mood without making you groggy.
Longer naps (>āÆ60āÆmin) or naps late in the afternoon can mess up your body clock and increase health risks.
What you can do ā
Stick to short naps: 20ā30 mins, early afternoon.
Keep it regular: same nap time every day helps your body rhythm.
Stay active: at least 150 mins of moderate exercise weekly.
Talk to a doctor: if youāre needing long or frequent naps after 60, get checked for sleep apnea, heart, or mental health issues.
MediaFx Opinion (from the peopleās lens)
From a people-first view, health isnāt about just telling elders to stop napping. This shows we need more community health support, free check-ups, and spaces for elders to move and socialise. When governments invest in good elder care and early health screening, everyone benefits. Working families shouldnāt have to struggle alone to care for their elders. šæš¬
Letās chat!
Have you or your grandparents noticed changes in nap habits? Tell us in the commentsāwhat time and how long do you nap, and how do you feel afterward? š #YourHealth #NapTalk