β‘ Live Signal Feed
122 signals Β· Ranked by priority Β· Clinical research + community sentiment
Priority = sentiment strength Γ evidence quality (max 99) Β· Community signals capped at "Moderate"
122
Total Signals
All sources combined
100
π¬ Clinical/Research
Peer-reviewed + gov sources
22
π£ Community
Reddit & forum discussions
44
πΊπΈ US Signals
US-sourced intelligence
34
π¨π¦ Canada Signals
Canada-specific coverage
5 Signals Β· Sorted by Priority80β99 = high impact Β· 60β79 = notable Β· below = monitoring
πΊπΈ USβ Sleepβ Risk SignalPeer-Reviewed
National Sleep Foundation data shows 8% of those with poor sleep health report not being productive at work versus only 3% of those with good sleep health. This quantifies the economic impact of sleep deficits on male workers.
92
Priority
High
πΊπΈ USβ Sleepβ Risk SignalPeer-Reviewed
The Dreem Health 2025 report found 34% of men experience significant sleep problems, indicating a substantial burden despite men faring better than women (41%). This represents a meaningful public health concern requiring targeted intervention.
89
Priority
High
πΊπΈ USβ Sleepβ Risk SignalModerate
CDC research identifies workplace pressures and financial stress as top contributors to men's mental health challenges, factors known to impair sleep quality and create cyclical health deterioration.
79
Priority
Notable
πΊπΈ USβ Sleepβ Risk SignalModerate
Research shows sleeping over 9 hours daily correlates with 11.8% lower visual memory, 3.4% slower reaction time, and 6.6% lower fluid intelligence scores. Both insufficient and excessive sleep carry cognitive penalties for men.
78
Priority
Notable
π¨π¦ Canadaβ SleepModerate
A major Canadian study found the relationship between bedtime screen use and sleep health varies by biological sex, age, and income, suggesting one-size-fits-all screen guidance may be insufficient for men's sleep interventions.
59
Priority
Monitor