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Try the coffee nap! Where you combine caffeine and a 30-minute nap to then have that boost energy and alertness by the time it kicks in.
💤 Sleep isn’t optional—it’s crucial for memory, mood regulation, and physical recovery. It is fundamentally different from rest
❌ Replacing sleep with caffeine isn’t effective and can have negative health impacts. Make getting enough sleep a priority
🌞 Sunlight exposure is important for maintaining circadian rhythms and sleep quality. This applies even if you work as a nocturnist
💡 Creating a personalized sleep system enhances quality and consistency. It gives you back control of a schedule that you may feel like is out of your hands.
🧩 If you’ve tried these strategies and you’re still struggling, consider true sleep pathology (insomnia, shift work disorder, sleep apnea) and get help—this is not a “be tougher” problem.
🩺 Better sleep isn’t just about feeling good; it’s directly tied to error reduction, patient safety, and longevity in EM/ICU careers.
Click here for Direct Download of the Podcast.
Welcome to this episode of REBEL MIND, where MIND stands for Mastering Internal Negativity during Difficulty. Here we sharpen the person behind the practitioner by focusing on things that improve our performance, optimizing team dynamics and the human behavior that embodies the hidden curriculum of medicine.
Today we are exploring the imperative topic of rest and why it’s not just about sleeping. The second of a two part series, hosted by Dr. Mark Ramzy with guests Dr. Maureen Aiad and Dr. Amil Badoolah, continue our discussion but this time on the multifaceted nature of sleep, how it serves as medicine and how we can use our tools deliberately to get more of it!
How would your clinical performance, patience with families, and long-term career sustainability change if you treated sleep as a non-negotiable clinical intervention rather than a flexible “nice-to-have”?
1. Rest reduces load; sleep repairs systems
2. Sleep architecture vs. “knocking out”
Biology isn’t built for your schedule
You’re already in a high-stress, high-exposure specialty. Chronically poor sleep amplifies that risk profile and can end a career early—or make you miserable while you’re still in it.
Culture of “heroics” vs. health
Clarify your “sleep non-negotiables”
Use caffeine like a drug, not a reflex
Respect alcohol’s impact on sleep
Optimize food and fluid timing
Move your body (but not right before bed)
Control light exposure
Dial in your sleep environment
Strategic power naps
Thoughtful melatonin use
Build pre-sleep rituals
Protect from pathologic patterns
Consider evaluation for sleep apnea, insomnia, or shift-work sleep disorder with your physician or sleep specialist.
1. **Before the Shift**:
2. **During the Shift**
3. **After the Shift**
Rest and sleep are both critical—but they’re not interchangeable. Rest helps you step out of the constant “on” of our jobs, while sleep is the biological intervention that restores your ability to show up safely and sustainably. Rest ≠ sleep. Rest reduces load; sleep repairs your brain and body. You need both, on purpose.
As EM and ICU clinicians, we’re trying to perform formula-one-level medicine with engines that often only see half their maintenance. You won’t fix shift work. You can build a sleep system that respects your biology, your schedule, and your life at home.
That system starts with valuing sleep, then prioritizing it, personalizing it, trusting the process when it’s imperfect, and actively protecting both your routine and your mindset.
Sleep is medicine. Shift work is biologically unnatural. Struggling does not mean you’re weak; it means you’re human fighting physiology. Use your tools deliberately. Caffeine, naps, light, food, movement, melatonin, and environment can be leveraged—or can quietly sabotage you. Build and defend a personalized sleep routine. Communicate it, normalize it, and protect it from casual encroachment. You can’t control every trauma, code, or admission—but you can control how seriously you take your own recovery. Your patients, your team, and your future self all benefit when you do.
Espie CA.
The ‘5 principles’ of good sleep health. J Sleep Res. 2022 Jun;
PMID: 34676592
“Sleep hygiene: Simple practices for better rest.” Harvard Health, 31 January 2025
Link is Here
Suni, E.
“Mastering Sleep Hygiene: Your Path to Quality Sleep.” Sleep Foundation, 7 July 2025,REBEL Core Cast 119.0 – Sleep Hygiene Click here for Direct Download of ...
The post REBEL MIND – How to Sleep When the World Says You Can’t appeared first on REBEL EM - Emergency Medicine Blog.
By Salim R. Rezaie, MD4.8
160160 ratings
Try the coffee nap! Where you combine caffeine and a 30-minute nap to then have that boost energy and alertness by the time it kicks in.
💤 Sleep isn’t optional—it’s crucial for memory, mood regulation, and physical recovery. It is fundamentally different from rest
❌ Replacing sleep with caffeine isn’t effective and can have negative health impacts. Make getting enough sleep a priority
🌞 Sunlight exposure is important for maintaining circadian rhythms and sleep quality. This applies even if you work as a nocturnist
💡 Creating a personalized sleep system enhances quality and consistency. It gives you back control of a schedule that you may feel like is out of your hands.
🧩 If you’ve tried these strategies and you’re still struggling, consider true sleep pathology (insomnia, shift work disorder, sleep apnea) and get help—this is not a “be tougher” problem.
🩺 Better sleep isn’t just about feeling good; it’s directly tied to error reduction, patient safety, and longevity in EM/ICU careers.
Click here for Direct Download of the Podcast.
Welcome to this episode of REBEL MIND, where MIND stands for Mastering Internal Negativity during Difficulty. Here we sharpen the person behind the practitioner by focusing on things that improve our performance, optimizing team dynamics and the human behavior that embodies the hidden curriculum of medicine.
Today we are exploring the imperative topic of rest and why it’s not just about sleeping. The second of a two part series, hosted by Dr. Mark Ramzy with guests Dr. Maureen Aiad and Dr. Amil Badoolah, continue our discussion but this time on the multifaceted nature of sleep, how it serves as medicine and how we can use our tools deliberately to get more of it!
How would your clinical performance, patience with families, and long-term career sustainability change if you treated sleep as a non-negotiable clinical intervention rather than a flexible “nice-to-have”?
1. Rest reduces load; sleep repairs systems
2. Sleep architecture vs. “knocking out”
Biology isn’t built for your schedule
You’re already in a high-stress, high-exposure specialty. Chronically poor sleep amplifies that risk profile and can end a career early—or make you miserable while you’re still in it.
Culture of “heroics” vs. health
Clarify your “sleep non-negotiables”
Use caffeine like a drug, not a reflex
Respect alcohol’s impact on sleep
Optimize food and fluid timing
Move your body (but not right before bed)
Control light exposure
Dial in your sleep environment
Strategic power naps
Thoughtful melatonin use
Build pre-sleep rituals
Protect from pathologic patterns
Consider evaluation for sleep apnea, insomnia, or shift-work sleep disorder with your physician or sleep specialist.
1. **Before the Shift**:
2. **During the Shift**
3. **After the Shift**
Rest and sleep are both critical—but they’re not interchangeable. Rest helps you step out of the constant “on” of our jobs, while sleep is the biological intervention that restores your ability to show up safely and sustainably. Rest ≠ sleep. Rest reduces load; sleep repairs your brain and body. You need both, on purpose.
As EM and ICU clinicians, we’re trying to perform formula-one-level medicine with engines that often only see half their maintenance. You won’t fix shift work. You can build a sleep system that respects your biology, your schedule, and your life at home.
That system starts with valuing sleep, then prioritizing it, personalizing it, trusting the process when it’s imperfect, and actively protecting both your routine and your mindset.
Sleep is medicine. Shift work is biologically unnatural. Struggling does not mean you’re weak; it means you’re human fighting physiology. Use your tools deliberately. Caffeine, naps, light, food, movement, melatonin, and environment can be leveraged—or can quietly sabotage you. Build and defend a personalized sleep routine. Communicate it, normalize it, and protect it from casual encroachment. You can’t control every trauma, code, or admission—but you can control how seriously you take your own recovery. Your patients, your team, and your future self all benefit when you do.
Espie CA.
The ‘5 principles’ of good sleep health. J Sleep Res. 2022 Jun;
PMID: 34676592
“Sleep hygiene: Simple practices for better rest.” Harvard Health, 31 January 2025
Link is Here
Suni, E.
“Mastering Sleep Hygiene: Your Path to Quality Sleep.” Sleep Foundation, 7 July 2025,REBEL Core Cast 119.0 – Sleep Hygiene Click here for Direct Download of ...
The post REBEL MIND – How to Sleep When the World Says You Can’t appeared first on REBEL EM - Emergency Medicine Blog.

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