Measure daytime sleepiness with the Epworth Sleepiness Scale. Evaluates dozing likelihood in 8 situations to screen for sleep disorders like obstructive sleep apnea.
The Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) is the most widely used subjective measure of daytime sleepiness. Developed by Dr. Murray Johns in 1991 at the Epworth Hospital in Melbourne, Australia, this validated questionnaire asks patients to rate their likelihood of dozing in eight common daily situations on a 0-3 scale, producing a total score from 0 to 24.
An ESS score above 10 suggests excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS) that warrants medical evaluation. Scores above 15-16 indicate severe sleepiness with significant functional impairment and potential safety concerns, particularly for driving. The ESS is used to screen for obstructive sleep apnea, narcolepsy, idiopathic hypersomnia, and other sleep-wake disorders.
While the ESS is a screening tool and not diagnostic, it provides a standardized, reproducible measure that can be tracked over time to assess treatment response. It is used globally in sleep medicine clinics, primary care practices, and occupational health programs. Check the example with realistic values before reporting.
Excessive daytime sleepiness is remarkably common — affecting up to 20% of the adult population — yet frequently underrecognized. The ESS provides a quick, standardized screening method that quantifies something patients often minimize or normalize.
For sleep medicine, the ESS serves as a baseline measure before treatment, tracks response to CPAP therapy, oral appliances, or stimulant medications, and provides documentation for insurance coverage of diagnostic testing and treatments.
ESS Total = Sum of 8 situation scores (each 0-3) Range: 0-24 0-5: Lower Normal Daytime Sleepiness 6-10: Higher Normal 11-12: Mild Excessive 13-15: Moderate Excessive 16-17: Severe Excessive 18-24: Very Severe Excessive
Result: ESS 8 — Higher Normal Daytime Sleepiness
A total score of 8 falls within the higher normal range. While not indicative of a sleep disorder, ensuring adequate sleep duration (7-9 hours for adults) and good sleep hygiene practices is recommended.
The ESS is widely used in occupational health screening for safety-sensitive occupations: commercial drivers, pilots, heavy equipment operators, and shift workers. Some regulatory bodies require periodic sleepiness screening and minimum ESS thresholds for fitness-for-duty certification. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration references sleepiness assessment in commercial driver medical examinations.
The ESS measures subjective sleepiness perception, which may not correlate with objective sleepiness measures. The Multiple Sleep Latency Test (MSLT) measures mean time to fall asleep across 4-5 nap opportunities and provides an objective sleepiness measure. The Maintenance of Wakefulness Test (MWT) evaluates the ability to stay awake. STOP-BANG screening is specifically designed for obstructive sleep apnea risk assessment.
Excessive daytime sleepiness has a broad differential: obstructive sleep apnea (most common), insufficient sleep syndrome, narcolepsy types 1 and 2, idiopathic hypersomnia, circadian rhythm disorders, medications, depression, and medical conditions (hypothyroidism, anemia). A systematic approach to evaluation, starting with sleep diary and actigraphy, followed by polysomnography and MSLT if indicated, ensures accurate diagnosis.
The ESS does not diagnose sleep apnea directly. An ESS ≥10 suggests excessive sleepiness that may be caused by sleep apnea. However, many patients with significant OSA have normal ESS scores (especially if they have adapted to chronic sleepiness). Conversely, high ESS can result from insufficient sleep, medications, depression, or other sleep disorders.
Successful CPAP therapy typically reduces ESS by 3-7 points. A persistent ESS >10 despite adequate CPAP usage and good AHI control suggests residual sleepiness that may require additional evaluation or adjunctive treatment (e.g., modafinil, solriamfetol).
ESS may be less reliable in elderly patients, who tend to score lower regardless of objective sleepiness. Some older adults have difficulty conceptualizing the dozing scenarios. The Maintenance of Wakefulness Test (MWT) or MSLT may be more appropriate for objective assessment in this population.
Sleepiness is the propensity to fall asleep — it increases with sleep deprivation and decreases with sleep. Fatigue is a sense of physical or mental exhaustion that is not necessarily relieved by sleep. The ESS measures sleepiness specifically. The Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS) measures fatigue.
Yes. Sedating medications (antihistamines, opioids, benzodiazepines, some antidepressants, muscle relaxants, gabapentinoids) can cause or worsen daytime sleepiness. Medication review is essential before attributing elevated ESS to a primary sleep disorder.
There is no universal legal threshold, but ESS ≥16 represents severe sleepiness with significant impairment. Many sleep medicine guidelines recommend discussing driving safety for ESS ≥11. Drowsy driving accounts for an estimated 100,000 crashes annually in the US.