Center for Sleep Science
Optimizing Health Through Sleep

The Center for Sleep Science ties together accomplished investigators in clinical, human, translational, and preclinical research who share an overarching mission to help patients with sleep disorders.

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Normal health, development, and performance require normal sleep. However, millions of Americans fail to get an adequate night's sleep due to sleep disorders. Such disorders contribute to depression, heart disease, diabetes, obesity, learning disorders, chronic pain, and motor vehicle accidents. Research increasingly shows that disordered sleep and circadian rhythms have enormous impact on quality of life, productivity, pregnancy, childhood development, and aging. The cost implications are substantial, for our society, country, states, local communities, institutions, businesses, and families.

About

We represent a campus-wide affiliation of faculty with major research interest in sleep, biological rhythms, their fundamental importance to human health, and the illnesses that disrupt them.

Education

Education is a central mission of Center for Sleep Science faculty. The UM Sleep Disorders Center offers a one-year, ACGME-approved fellowship in sleep medicine.

Patient Care

The University of Michigan Sleep Disorders Center is one of the nation’s leading programs, and among the oldest and largest, with nearly 10,000 clinic visits.

People

The UM Center for Sleep Science is an affiliation of faculty who seek to advance understanding of normal sleep physiology and the diagnosis, pathophysiology, and treatment of sleep illnesses.

Our Goal
Understanding Healthy Sleep

The main goal of the University of Michigan Center for Sleep Science is to advance knowledge and understanding in three areas:

The physiology of normal sleep and biological rhythms.
Diagnosis of sleep disorders.
Treatment of sleep illnesses.

Sleep medicine is a relatively new field. Despite rapid advances, the public and academic medicine remain largely unaware of the central importance of adequate sleep. Moreover, much remains unknown about the mechanisms that underlie both healthy sleep and the illnesses that prevent it.

The UM Center for Sleep Science spans several schools and more than a dozen departments. Its members include more than 70 faculty with an active interest in sleep and rhythms research. The Center for Sleep Science ties together accomplished investigators in clinical, human, translational, and preclinical research who share an overarching mission to help patients with sleep disorders realize better health, productivity, and quality of life through better sleep.

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