The Navy’s Silent Threat: Sleep Deprivation (Learn More, Videos)

By Adam Weinstein, Task & Purpose

“I don’t think I can remember not being completely exhausted on watch, be it the middle of the day or the seven-to-forever,” says August Sorvillo, a former Navy quartermaster who helped his ships navigate all manners of challenging channels and anchorages.

“It’s safe to say I’ve bought enough Red Bull, Monster, and Rip-Its that I could [have made] a sizable down payment on a house.”

Lori Schulze Buresh, a former surface warfare officer, still cringes thinking about the deployment where she stood the Navy’s notorious “five and dime” watches: five hours on, 10 off, then repeat — no matter what time of day or night.

“The hardest part is being awake at some point every night and still doing a job all day,” she says.

“It is hard on a body and hard on the mind.”

After four different groundings and collisions in less than a year in its Japan-based 7th Fleet — including the crashes of the advanced guided-missile destroyers USS Fitzgerald and USS McCain this summer, leaving 17 sailors dead or missing — the Navy is cleaning house and doing some soul-searching.

But beyond the particulars of each incident, service officials are intent on identifying broader issues that may leave crews more prone to deadly accidents.

Many current and former sailors have a suggestion for the Navy: Let your crews sleep more.

It’s not a new refrain: Sleep deprivation, long a fixture in all the military services, is accepted by most sailors as a way of life, made slightly more bearable by strong coffee, midrats, and SWOnuts.

In the naval service, “Sleep when you’re dead” is the unwritten 11th general order.

‘Watch rotations… aren’t conducive to sleep’

But science shows that this hard-charging ethos can yield a fleet of well-trained watchstanding zombies.

In a 2012 military study, 39% of sailors reported that they were “frequently not getting enough restful sleep to function well at work and in their personal lives.”

Previous studies have suggested that surface sailors lose out on five to nine hours of sleep every week they’re underway.

In 2015, the RAND Corporation published a two-year survey on sleep in the military, and the findings were dire.

It showed “a high prevalence of insufficient sleep duration, poor sleep quality, daytime sleepiness, fatigue, and nightmares” across the military — particularly in the fleet.

RAND found that out of all military communities, the Navy alone had one significant red flag: Sailors “with prior deployments had greater sleep-related daytime impairment than those without a prior deployment.”

This is especially problematic for surface ships, which lean heavily on mid-level officers and petty officers with prior underway experience to conduct bridge and combat information center watches that are critical to safe navigation.

“We have environments in the Navy and the Marine Corps that aren’t conducive to sleep, watch rotations that aren’t conducive to sleep, and people don’t always pay a whole lot of attention to that,” one sailor told the RAND researchers.

(Hear from Dr. Kirk Parsley, Navy SEAL, as he gives some insight into the importance of sleep and its direct impact on our performance. Courtesy of SEALFIT and YouTube)

‘I have seen and heard things that weren’t there’

The problem is significant enough that when one sailor responded to the McCain collision by sharing her daily work schedule and sleep problems on Reddit this week, the thread exploded with hundreds of commiserating comments from vets of the surface, sub, and naval air communities.

“I averaged 3 hours of sleep a night” on a destroyer and cruiser, the sailor wrote:

I have personally gone without sleep for so long that I have seen and heard things that weren’t there.

I’ve witnessed accidents that could have been avoided because the person was so tired they had no right to be operating heavy machinery, including an incident in which someone got descalped and someone else almost losing a finger.

The responses, from veterans and civilians, were wrenching.

“I work for an airline,” one commenter said. “If we operated on this schedule they would [shut] us down so fast we couldn’t even look.”

(Hear from Former Navy SEAL sniper Brandon Webb who completed one of the military’s hardest training programs in order to become a SEAL. Many of us have heard of ‘Hell Week’ and how brutal the experience can be, but Webb describes a different phase of his training that proved to be even more challenging. Courtesy of Business Insider and YouTube)

Setting the ‘circadian watchbill’

The Navy knows sleep deprivation is a perpetual problem in its ranks.

“Fatigue has measurable negative effects on readiness, effectiveness and safety,” Vice Adm. Thomas Rowden, commander of Naval Surface Force—Pacific, said in a fleet-wide message in 2016.

“After a day without sleep, human performance drops to dangerously ineffective levels.”

Rowden and other senior Navy leaders have been taking pointers on keeping a ship’s crew well-rested from a “Crew Endurance Team” of military and civilian experts at the Naval Postgraduate School.

Their suggestions include setting a “circadian watchbill” — organizing watches to conform to a 24-hour rotation, more in line with the human body’s natural sleep rhythms.

Asked whether any of 7th Fleet’s mishaps could be directly attributable to sleep and fatigue issues, the sailors are more circumspect.

For one thing, there are no easy fixes; for another, everyone’s really busy and tired most of the time.

“It’s a factor, but it’s always been a factor,” one former surface officer told Task & Purpose. “But you’ve got to have watches.”

‘The practice briefing for the pre-briefing’

The officer says that sleep deprivation may be less of a cause than a symptom of bloat in sailors’ responsibilities, including arcane online training requirements (also a target of Secretary of Defense James Mattis), collateral duties, and a host of chores you don’t have to do, but should, like “the practice briefing for the pre-briefing, because the XO didn’t think we were ready [to brief the CO] yet.”

Courtesy of the US Navy
Courtesy of the US Navy

“The focus on collateral duties in our modern Navy [owns] part of the blame for a lot of missed days of sleep,” Sorvillo, the enlisted navigator, says.

“On my last ship I, as well as quite a few others, had at least two full time duties to perform before going on watch… Eighteen to twenty hour days was the norm for six to eight months.”

Regardless of whether sleepy sailors can keep it together for a successful bridge watch, the Navy’s grueling schedules may wreck their crews even after getting out of uniform: Research suggests that fatigue problems, once programmed into a service member’s biology, can follow them for life.

“[O]nce initiated, sleep disturbances may follow a persistent course, lasting for years after deployment,” RAND’s study concluded.

The authors added that “sleep problems are prevalent, debilitating, and persistent in service member populations in the post-deployment period.”

That’s no news to Sorvillo. “I’ve been diagnosed with chronic insomnia,” he told Task & Purpose.

Despite leaving the fleet in 2009, he says, “I still get at most four hours of sleep a night.”

Original post http://taskandpurpose.com/fitzgerald-mccain-sleep-deprivation-navy/

Learn More…

(Learn More, courtesy of the The Young Turks and YouTube)

“All over the world, scientists are experimenting on soldiers to keep them awake beyond the limits of normal endurance. Researchers are engineering, and militaries are deploying, chemically enhanced troops.”*

“Of all the superpowers we’ve imagined, the one that has turned out to be most attainable—so attainable we’re already using it—is the ability to go without sleep.”*

“Is this a war on sleep? Modafinil is a drug that keeps users awake, and is used in moderation for narcolepsy. But soldiers have been taken enough of the drug to stay up for 90 hours straight.*

“The military has justification, but what about the havoc sleep deprivation will wreck on the soldiers?”*

*Read more from Slate: http://www.slate.com/articles/health_…