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Match Provider Supply to Demand
Acquire Commercial Patients
Capture Outpatient Demand
Target High-Value HCPs
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We collect and organize the industry’s most comprehensive healthcare datasets.
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Original, data-driven research on trends shaping the health economy
Develop Service Line Strategies
Analyze the Competitive Landscape
Anticipate Future Patient Needs
Identify Sites To Capture Demand
Drive Loyalty Across the Patient Journey
Leverage Price Transparency Insights
Retain Patients in Your Network
Match Provider Supply to Demand
Acquire Commercial Patients
Capture Outpatient Demand
Target High-Value HCPs
Strengthen Provider Networks
We collect and organize the industry’s most comprehensive healthcare datasets.
See demand, supply and yield across the U.S. health economy
Validated Data for 2.9M Practitioners
Episodes of Care for 300M Patients
Negotiated Rates for Any Service at Any Location
Flexible solutions to fit your specific needs and workflow
Answer Key Questions in Seconds
Custom Enterprise-Level Analyses
Inform Data-Driven Strategies
Free resources to help health economy stakeholders use our products and data
Health Economy Survival Strategies
Product Guides and Feature Releases
How We Tackle Technical Problems
Data-Driven Benchmarking Tool
Strategic guidance and commentary from our CEO, Hal Andrews
Annual fact-based analysis of trends shaping the health economy
Original, data-driven research on trends shaping the health economy
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Recent research indicates that Americans are collectively experiencing the psychological impacts in the aftermath of macro events of the past five years, including pandemic-era lockdowns, economic uncertainty and global conflicts, manifesting in the deteriorating mental health status of the country.1 Sleep is a critical component in overall health status, notably for cognitive functioning, stress management, mood, mental health and physical health (e.g., cardiovascular, cerebrovascular and metabolic health).2 Chronic insufficient sleep is associated with an increased risk of mortality and chronic conditions (i.e., cardiovascular disease, diabetes, obesity and cancer).3 Given the implications for health status and mortality, we were interested in examining trends in sleep disorders.
While the recommended amount of sleep varies by age, the American Academy of Sleep Medicine and the Sleep Research Society recommend seven or more hours of sleep per night for the average adult to maintain optimal health.4 The field of sleep medicine is less mature relative to other areas of medicine but has been the focus of rapid development since the middle of the 20th century. In the 1980s, circadian sleep-wake disorders received recognition as their own category of disorders and the origins of sleep medicine fellowships were established.5 As of 2024, there are 213 sleep medicine fellowship positions offered nationally among 102 programs, with an 88.3% fill rate.6
Surveys conducted over decades have revealed that Americans are generally more stressed and sleeping less than ever before.7 A majority of U.S. adults (57%) reported in 2023 that they would feel better if they got more sleep, an increase of 12 percentage points from 2001 (Figure 1). Additionally, while just 3% of Americans got five or fewer hours of sleep per night in 1942, this share increased to 20% by 2023.
With worsening sleep habits and higher stress levels in a health economy with a limited supply of sleep specialists, it is important to understand the prevalence of sleep disorders and demand for related care in the U.S.
We leveraged our national all-payer claims database to analyze utilization of health services attributed to select sleep disorders between 2019 and 2023. We examined patients in aggregate, and for ages 18-44, 45-65 and over age 65.
Trends in sleep disorders by condition reveal meaningfully different levels of change over the last four years. Visits for sleep apnea comprised the highest volume of care utilization and increased 27.9% from 2019 to 2023, while sleep-related hypoventilation – abnormally slow or shallow breathing during sleep, leading to insufficient oxygen intake and increased levels of carbon dioxide in the blood – increased 60.7% during the same time period. In contrast, visits related to narcolepsy (-8.7%) and circadian rhythm disorders (-6.5%) declined (Figure 2).
Thanks to Colin Macon and Katie Patton for their research support.