News Flash
WASHINGTON, Aug 7, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - From mouth taping to rope-assisted neck
swinging, a viral social media trend is promoting extreme bedtime routines
that claim to deliver perfect sleep -- despite scant medical evidence and
potential safety risks.
Influencers on platforms including TikTok and X are fueling a growing
wellness obsession popularly known as "sleepmaxxing," a catch-all term for
activities and products aimed at optimizing sleep quality.
The explosive rise of the trend -- generating tens of millions of posts --
underscores social media's power to legitimize unproven health practices,
particularly as tech platforms scale back content moderation.
One so-called insomnia cure involves people hanging by their necks with ropes
or belts and swinging their bodies in the air.
"Those who try it claim their sleep problems have significantly improved,"
said one clip on X that racked up more than 11 million views.
Experts have raised alarm about the trick, following a Chinese state
broadcaster's report that attributed at least one fatality in China last year
to a similar "neck hanging" routine.
Such sleepmaxxing techniques are "ridiculous, potentially harmful, and
evidence-free," Timothy Caulfield, a misinformation expert from the
University of Alberta in Canada, told AFP.
"It is a good example of how social media can normalize the absurd."
Another popular practice is taping of the mouth for sleep, promoted as a way
to encourage nasal breathing. Influencers claim it offers broad benefits,
from better sleep and improved oral health to reduced snoring.
But a report from George Washington University found that most of these
claims were not supported by medical research.
Experts have also warned the practice could be dangerous, particularly for
those suffering from sleep apnea, a condition that disrupts breathing during
sleep.
Other unfounded tricks touted by sleepmaxxing influencers include wearing
blue- or red-tinted glasses, using weighted blankets, and eating two kiwis
just before bed.
- 'Damaging' -
"My concern with the 'sleepmaxxing' trend -- particularly as it's presented
on platforms like TikTok -- is that much of the advice being shared can be
actively unhelpful, even damaging, for people struggling with real sleep
issues," Kathryn Pinkham, a Britain-based insomnia specialist, told AFP.
"While some of these tips might be harmless for people who generally sleep
well, they can increase pressure and anxiety for those dealing with chronic
insomnia or other persistent sleep problems."
While sound and sufficient sleep is considered a cornerstone of good health,
experts warn that the trend may be contributing to orthosomnia, an obsessive
preoccupation with achieving perfect sleep.
"The pressure to get perfect sleep is embedded in the sleepmaxxing culture,"
said Eric Zhou of Harvard Medical School.
"While prioritizing restful sleep is commendable, setting perfection as your
goal is problematic. Even good sleepers vary from night to night."
Pinkham added that poor sleep was often fuelled by the "anxiety to fix it," a
fact largely unacknowledged by sleepmaxxing influencers.
"The more we try to control sleep with hacks or rigid routines, the more
vigilant and stressed we become -- paradoxically making sleep harder,"
Pinkham said.
- Beauty over health -
Many sleepmaxxing posts focus on enhancing physical appearance rather than
improving health, reflecting an overlap with "looksmaxxing" -- another online
trend that encourages unproven and sometimes dangerous techniques to boost
sexual appeal.
Some sleepmaxxing influencers have sought to profit from the trend's growing
popularity, promoting products such as mouth tapes, sleep-enhancing drink
powders, and "sleepmax gummies" containing melatonin.
That may be in violation of legal norms in some countries like Britain, where
melatonin is available only as a prescription drug.
The American Academy of Sleep Medicine has recommended against using
melatonin to treat insomnia in adults, citing inconsistent medical evidence
regarding its effectiveness.
Some medical experts also caution about the impact of the placebo effect on
insomnia patients using sleep medication -- when people report real
improvement after taking a fake or nonexistent treatment because of their
beliefs.
"Many of these tips come from non-experts and aren't grounded in clinical
evidence," said Pinkham.
"For people with genuine sleep issues, this kind of advice often adds
pressure rather than relief."