• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • About
  • The Magazine
  • Events
  • Partners
  • Products
  • Contact
  • Jobs and Careers
  • Advertise
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Subscribe
American Police Beat

American Police Beat Magazine

Law Enforcement Publication

  • Home
  • Leadership
    • Clarifying your “true north”
      The job has changed — have you?
      Perpetual recognition of line-of-duty deaths
      Understanding the boundaries of professional relationships with the...
      Why you should lead from 30,000 feet
  • Topics
    • Leadership
      • Clarifying your “true north”
        The job has changed — have you?
        Perpetual recognition of line-of-duty deaths
        Understanding the boundaries of professional relationships with the...
        Why you should lead from 30,000 feet
    • Editor’s Picks
      • Smile and let them swing
        The job has changed — have you?
        The days that follow
        Perpetual recognition of line-of-duty deaths
        Let’s get moving!
    • On the Job
      • Curbing teen takeovers
        2026 Top Cops
        High-rise rescue in Brooklyn
        Swift thinking
        K-9 officer turns children’s book author
    • Labor
      • Why more staff won’t fix your operational slowdowns
        Drama in Georgia: Mayor fires entire police department for...
        Smile and let them swing
        The Promise Gap
        Cut the cops, save a dollar?
    • Tech
      • Training with an AI partner?
        NYC’s electric vehicle fleet for LE passes milestone
        New Mexico license plate readers save lives, lead to “precise...
        A modern field guide to understanding research in policing
        Gear that moves with you
    • Training
      • Rules or results?
        Enhance your preparedness
        Good enough never is
        Pushback as a training signal
        Let’s get moving!
    • Policy
      • Police and local government leaders join forces to build community...
        Police pause license plate readers
        Corruption, collusion and impunity
        E-bikes spark public safety concerns
        Try racing without wheels
    • Health/Wellness
      • The days that follow
        Addressing stress, vicarious trauma and burnout
        Nervous system regulation
        The nature of the job
        Promoting organizational wellness
    • Community
      • Working community connections
        Cops promote National Donate Life Month
        Police officer kicks up social media praise
        Donning denim in solidarity with victims and survivors of sexual...
        Improving autism awareness
    • Offbeat
      • “Teenage Mutant Ninja Deer” rescued
        An unexpected burglar
        Police humor only a cop would understand
        Not eggzactly a perfect heist
        Pizza … with a side of alligator?
    • We Remember
      • National Police Week 2026
        Shooting of Chicago police officers prompts call for new regulations...
        The sacrifice continues
        A Tribute to Fallen Heroes
        Markers of service and remembrance
    • HOT Mail
      • The War on Cops Continues Unabated
  • On the Job
    • Curbing teen takeovers
      2026 Top Cops
      High-rise rescue in Brooklyn
      Swift thinking
      K-9 officer turns children’s book author
  • Labor
    • Why more staff won’t fix your operational slowdowns
      Drama in Georgia: Mayor fires entire police department for...
      Smile and let them swing
      The Promise Gap
      Cut the cops, save a dollar?
  • Tech
    • Training with an AI partner?
      NYC’s electric vehicle fleet for LE passes milestone
      New Mexico license plate readers save lives, lead to “precise...
      A modern field guide to understanding research in policing
      Gear that moves with you
  • Training
    • Rules or results?
      Enhance your preparedness
      Good enough never is
      Pushback as a training signal
      Let’s get moving!
  • Policy
    • Police and local government leaders join forces to build community...
      Police pause license plate readers
      Corruption, collusion and impunity
      E-bikes spark public safety concerns
      Try racing without wheels
  • Health/Wellness
    • The days that follow
      Addressing stress, vicarious trauma and burnout
      Nervous system regulation
      The nature of the job
      Promoting organizational wellness
  • Community
    • Working community connections
      Cops promote National Donate Life Month
      Police officer kicks up social media praise
      Donning denim in solidarity with victims and survivors of sexual...
      Improving autism awareness
  • Offbeat
    • “Teenage Mutant Ninja Deer” rescued
      An unexpected burglar
      Police humor only a cop would understand
      Not eggzactly a perfect heist
      Pizza … with a side of alligator?
  • We Remember
    • National Police Week 2026
      Shooting of Chicago police officers prompts call for new regulations...
      The sacrifice continues
      A Tribute to Fallen Heroes
      Markers of service and remembrance
  • HOT Mail
    • The War on Cops Continues Unabated
  • About
  • The Magazine
  • Events
  • Partners
  • Products
  • Contact
  • Jobs and Careers
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
Search

Health/Wellness

Telling cops to get more sleep isn’t working

Joy VerPlanck, DET, Jessica Oehlke, M.D., and Lois James, Ph.D. Published March 13, 2026 @ 6:00 am PDT

iStock.com/Nicole Rerk

Sleep matters, and many officers don’t need another reminder. Every wellness briefing and medical appointment already says it. Exhausted law enforcement officers are among the most studied professionals in high-risk jobs.¹[1]Allison, P., Tiesman, H. M., Wong, I. S., Bernzweig, D., James, L., James, S. M., Navarro, K. M., & Patterson, P. D. (2022). Working Hours, Sleep, and Fatigue in the Public Safety Sector: A … Continue reading “Get more sleep” has become another version of “drink more water.”

Plenty of officers already understand the risk and respond with, “If I could sleep more, I would.” Treating sleep as a choice ignores rotating shifts, interrupted nights, back-to-back calls and the way a high-alert brain keeps replaying scenarios long after the shift ends. Individuals in threat-ready roles often struggle to downshift because the system is still running.

There are ways to address the need for sleep without telling officers to simply get more of it.

Immediate actions for the real world

If lavender spray on your pillow works for you, great. But for individuals whose nervous systems stay activated long after work ends, sleep requires tactics that meet the body precisely where it is.

If you feel wired when you get home, you may be stuck in sympathetic activation. Try:

  • Controlled breathing, such as box or tactical breathing.
  • Low-intensity movement, including light stretching or a slow spin on a bike.

If your mind won’t stop replaying the shift, rumination drains energy without creating solutions. Try:

  • Writing down the problems and setting them aside.
  • Talking through the day with someone who will listen for five to 10 minutes, then shifting topics.

If you fall asleep fast but wake up at 2 a.m., your brain may associate the bed with alertness. Try:

  • Leaving the bed and doing a simple, quiet task under dim light.
  • Reading something calming, not scrolling on your phone.

If sleep feels shallow, one bad night doesn’t define a pattern. Try:

  • Tracking sleep trends to understand what’s actually happening.
  • Adjusting environmental factors such as temperature, sheets, pillow and noise.

If you tell yourself you “should” be sleeping better, judgment increases stress. Try:

  • Reframing: “I’ve handled this before.”
  • Acknowledging the choices that contributed, then moving on.

Training for sleep

Long-term improvement requires training, not reminders. In 2025, the Seattle Police Department saw significant gains after implementing a fatigue risk management program.²[2]James, L., James, S., & Atherley, L. (2024). Evaluating the Effectiveness of a Fatigue Training Intervention for the Seattle Police Department: Results From a Randomized Control Trial. Journal of … Continue reading Sleep improved. So did mood, alertness and safety indicators, including reduced drowsy driving.

Incorporating sleep awareness into simulation-based training helps connect fatigue to performance. For example, if an instructor notices slower responses, the debrief can address how sleep affects reaction time and decision-making.

Instructors don’t need medical certifications to reinforce the basics of sleep:

  • Sleep, nutrition, fitness, stress and performance are linked.
  • Exercise and nutrition help. Alcohol and junk food don’t. Mental health matters.
  • Consistent routines support the body, even with rotating shifts. Go to sleep and wake up at roughly the same time each day, if possible.
  • Use light and sound strategically for alertness and rest. Try a light box to wake up for the night shift and blackout curtains for day sleepers.
  • Track sleep patterns, make adjustments and get screened when needed. It may not be your fault, and medical interventions can help.
  • Reduce screen time, emotional activation, alcohol, caffeine and heavy meals before bed.

Putting it all to rest

Sleep supports judgment, reaction time and emotional steadiness. We can’t force it on command, and trying harder rarely works. What does work is training the inputs — the habits, rhythms and conditions that make rest possible. Officers deserve training and guidance that fits the actual demands of the job, not just another reminder to “get more sleep.” Start with a few steps that work for a body trained to stay alert, and make sleep part of how you train for everything else.

iStock.com/arthobbit

March is National Sleep Awareness Month

This month is the perfect time to learn about the many benefits of sleep, why it’s essential to your overall health and emotional well-being, and to recommit to improving your sleep health.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that getting quality rest can help you get sick less often, maintain a healthy weight, reduce stress, improve your mood, support heart health and metabolism, and lower the risk of chronic conditions such as heart disease and Type 2 diabetes. Sleep also reduces the risk of motor vehicle crashes and related injury or death and improves attention and memory, helping you perform daily activities more effectively. This is especially important for first responders, who must remain alert and ready to respond to unpredictable calls every day.

A 2025 poll from the National Sleep Foundation examining the connection between healthy sleep and “flourishing,” defined by the organization as being happy, productive at home and work, achieving goals and having a fulfilling social life, found that:

  • Nearly 9 in 10 adults (88%) with good sleep satisfaction are flourishing, compared to fewer than half (47%) of those with low sleep satisfaction.
  • People who get the recommended 7–9 hours of sleep per night are more likely to flourish.
  • More than 7 in 10 people report that they flourish when they get enough quality sleep.
  • People with poor sleep health were more likely to be unproductive at home, lack a fulfilling social life, be unproductive at work, fail to achieve their goals and report lower levels of happiness.

With these facts in mind, there is no better time than now to make sleep a priority for your health, safety and performance.

Joy VerPlanck, DET, Jessica Oehlke, M.D., and Lois James, Ph.D.

Joy VerPlanck, DET, Jessica Oehlke, M.D., and Lois James, Ph.D.

Dr. Joy VerPlanck is a learning and development consultant serving organizations of all sizes in the public and private sectors. She is a former military police officer and current chair of the cognitive advisory board at MILO training solutions. Joy holds a doctorate in educational technology, a master of science in organizational leadership and training, and a certificate in the foundations of neuroleadership.

Dr. Jessica Oehlke is a sleep medicine physician and the owner of Lakeside Sleep Care in Vermont. She is double-board certified in psychiatry and sleep medicine and previously served as a sleep physician with the Department of Veterans Affairs. Dr. Oehlke completed her medical training at Albany Medical College, her psychiatry residency at the University of Vermont Medical Center and her Sleep Medicine Fellowship at the University of Pennsylvania.

Dr. Lois James is the director of the Sleep Performance Research Center at the Washington State University (WSU) College of Nursing. She focuses on bias, stress, sleep and performance in “high-stress” populations such as police officers, military personnel, nurses and top-tier athletes. Dr. James is the founding director of Counter Bias Training Simulation (CBTsim), a training product available exclusively through MILO, where she also serves on the cognitive advisory board.

View articles by Joy VerPlanck, DET, Jessica Oehlke, M.D., and Lois James, Ph.D.

As seen in the March 2026 issue of American Police Beat magazine.
Don’t miss out on another issue today! Click below:

SUBSCRIBE TODAY!

References[+]

References
1 Allison, P., Tiesman, H. M., Wong, I. S., Bernzweig, D., James, L., James, S. M., Navarro, K. M., & Patterson, P. D. (2022). Working Hours, Sleep, and Fatigue in the Public Safety Sector: A Scoping Review of the Research. American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 65(11), 878–897. doi.org/10.1002/ajim.23407.
2 James, L., James, S., & Atherley, L. (2024). Evaluating the Effectiveness of a Fatigue Training Intervention for the Seattle Police Department: Results From a Randomized Control Trial. Journal of Experimental Criminology, 21(4), 1121–1135. doi.org/10.1007/s11292-024-09624-x.

Categories: Health/Wellness

Primary Sidebar

Recent Articles

  • Why more staff won’t fix your operational slowdowns
  • Training with an AI partner?
  • Curbing teen takeovers
  • 2026 Top Cops
  • National Police Week 2026
  • Drama in Georgia: Mayor fires entire police department for criticizing his wife
  • Shooting of Chicago police officers prompts call for new regulations on electronic monitoring
  • High-rise rescue in Brooklyn
  • Swift thinking
  • Cheektowaga P.D. boosts patrol efficiency with Patrolfinder

Footer

Our Mission
To serve as a trusted voice of the nation’s law enforcement community, providing informative, entertaining and inspiring content on interesting and engaging topics affecting peace officers today.

Contact us: info@apbweb.com | (800) 234-0056.

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter

Categories

  • Editor’s Picks
  • On the Job
  • Labor
  • Tech
  • Training
  • Policy
  • Health/Wellness
  • Community
  • Offbeat
  • We Remember
  • Jobs and Careers
  • Events

Editor’s Picks

Smile and let them swing

Smile and let them swing

May 16, 2026

The job has changed — have you?

The job has changed — have you?

May 15, 2026

The days that follow

The days that follow

May 11, 2026

Perpetual recognition of line-of-duty deaths

Perpetual recognition of line-of-duty deaths

May 10, 2026

Policies | Consent Preferences | Copyright © 2026 APB Media, LLC | Website design, development and maintenance by 911MEDIA

Open

Subscribe

Close

Receive the latest news and updates from American Police Beat directly to your inbox!

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.