| UNDER THE SUN | Sleepless People of color aren’t sleeping so well. BY ROBRT L. PELA L 2022 HONDA CIVIC 4D TOURING #3 IS ALMOST #1: I love when companies are on their game. Honda’s press team sent over an incredibly well produced and informative deck on the Honda Civic and all of the amazing things about this vehicle. If you’re new to Clutch, you have yet to learn that I have a sweet spot in my heart for well made, well produced and well sold vehicles. And Honda, is as trusty as they come. The Honda Civic is the #3 most sold sedan in the world since 1979 behind the Honda Accord and Toyota Camry. These three have been around for quite some time, so the stat is a little skewed but impressive nonetheless. Civic is also the #3 most Instagrammed automobile in the world. Interesting. Now, the Civic is a champ. It looks excellent and drives wonderfully. RATING (out of 5 McFly’s) Looks: Pick-Up: Handling: Comfort: 6 Safety & Security: Value: Fuel Economy Overall: 2022 HONDA CIVIC 4D TOURING Questions? Feedback? Email me at [email protected] • Follow me on The cabin is well designed, spacious, gives off the vibe of almost luxury but is incredibly affordable at $29,295. The 180 horsepower 1.5-Liter 4-cylinder engine delivers a little pep but also an incredible fuel economy at 31/38 MPG. The 2022 Honda Civic, while #3 in sales since 1979, is a #1 contender for best value in 2022. auri Leadley was having a hard time concentrating. She was picking up a friend from Sky Harbor, and when you were driving in circles around an air- port terminal, she explained, it was diffi- cult to focus on a conversation about why people of color are getting less sleep than white people are these days. This sleep thing had been on Leadley’s mind a great deal lately. So much so that she’d hired a publicist to help her get the word out about what could be done to help peo- ple of color get some rest. She figured she knew. A clinical sleep educator, Leadley owns Valley Sleep Center. “We diag- nose and treat sleep dis- orders. We do in-home sleep testing and provide in-office therapy, CPAP therapy, and treatment for all the sleep disor- ders. I spend my time be- ing CEO, doing publicity, and helping to educate the public.” What Leadley wanted too, so they’re spending less time in deeper sleep. And both of those can lead to health issues, like diabetes and heart disease.” If people of certain ethnicities are toss- ing and turning, she said, it’s probably be- cause they’re stressed out about the world we live in. She’d been reading about how the murder of George Floyd and the subse- quent trial had left more than 60 percent of Black Americans with insomnia. “I don’t think we should be lying to peo- ple or telling them not to worry about this stuff, especially if it’s happening to people of their same ethnicity,” Leadley insisted over the honking of car horns. “What we should do is get them into a sleep center to learn how to go to bed at the same time, wake up at the same time, and get seven to nine hours of sleep per night.” Leadley didn’t want people to think she was using issues of race to promote her business. But getting peo- ple of color into Valley Sleep Center could only help them, she believed. “I’d start by making Lauri Leadley. to teach about lately was how Black and Latinx people were stressed out about rac- ism and therefore not catching 40 winks. She’d read a CDC report in which reearch- ers asked 500,000 American adults about their household income, their sleep habits, and their ethnicity. “Race has a direct link to quality of sleep,” she says. The results suggested to Leadley that ethnic minorities who were discriminated against in the workforce couldn’t afford a great sleep environment. “We try to educate people to have a calm, cool environment to sleep in,” said Leadley. “But some people with lower incomes may not have a cool, dark room to sleep in. They may not even have a bed. Or they might live somewhere that’s loud. All of these can affect your ability to relax, to fall asleep, and stay asleep.” She leaned out the car window to speak to a parking attendant, then resumed her thought. “I mean, there’s no formal univer- sity study about this that I know of, one that links job discrimination to sleep envi- ronments. But people in my business have been talking about this for a while.” And then there was that recent report in Science Magazine about how communities of color are taking longer to fall asleep, Lead- ley said. “And they’re waking up more often, Lauri Leadley sure they don’t have any other sleep disorders, like sleep apnea, which can be race-related. That’s a prominent disorder in Asian culture, because of airway and facial features that can cause anatomical obstructions.” Clients would be indi- vidually evaluated by an in-house physician, then Leadley would ask ques- tions about the client’s sleep history. Once certain disorders were ruled out, patients would be treated with cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia. “You know, you’d work with a sleep psy- chologist to help retrain your brain,” she said. “If you were upset about being dis- criminated against, we could teach you to have more positive thoughts than negative thoughts as you’re trying to fall asleep.” Any allied health professional can be- come a sleep educator, Leadley said. She started out as a respiratory therapist who became fascinated with how breathing and sleep are related. That led her to working as a sleep technologist. “It’s an important job, because we help the public understand the importance of sleep,” she insisted. “You know the analogy I like the best? I like to tell people that not sleeping enough is like going to bed and forgetting to plug in your cellphone. You have to recharge both of them to get through the next day.” She thought it was possible that white people were also worried about how people of color were being treated these days, and that it might be affecting their sleep as well. “But I really don’t know just yet,” she said. “All of this is new, and I’m just trying to figure it all out.” JAN 6TH– JAN 12TH, 2022 PHOENIX NEW TIMES | MUSIC | CAFE | FILM | CULTURE | NIGHT+DAY | FEATURE | NEWS | OPINION | FEEDBACK | CONTENTS | phoenixnewtimes.com