Showing posts with label sleep. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sleep. Show all posts

Saturday, April 05, 2014

Using Electronics Before Bed May Hamper Sleep.



Health
 
Using Electronics Before Bed May Hamper Sleep

TVs, cell phones, computers appear to be affecting quality slumber time, survey says

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By Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter
MONDAY, March 7 (HealthDay News) -- Sleep tight, but not right after looking at something bright.
That's the message of a new survey that suggests many Americans might be losing valuable shut-eye because they spend the hour before bedtime in front of the electronic glow of a television, cell phone or computer.
The survey doesn't prove that exposure to bright light before bed disrupts sleep. But some experts recommend an "electronic curfew" an hour before bedtime, when people should dim lamps and avoid checking their e-mail or watching late-night TV.
"Falling asleep isn't like flicking a switch. We don't put our heads on the pillow and fall off to sleep," said Allison G. Harvey, a sleep specialist and professor of psychology at the University of California at Berkeley. "We take time to wind down at night. If we've got bright light conditions, we're not giving ourselves a chance to get off to sleep and stay asleep."
The National Sleep Foundation's annual Sleep in America poll, whose results were released Monday, surveyed 1,508 people between the ages of 13 and 64.
Overall, the survey suggests that a majority of Americans aren't getting enough sleep: 63 percent said their needs aren't being met during the week.
Ninety-five percent of those surveyed said they'd used an electronic device -- such as a television, computer, video game or cell phone -- within the hour before bed at least a few nights a week. About two-thirds of people aged 30 to 64 frequently watch TV in the hour before bed, but only about half of younger people do. Not surprisingly, those under 30 are much more likely than older people to send or receive text messages on their cell phones in the hour before bed.
The problem is that light exposure before sleep can disrupt body rhythms and suppress the release of the hormone melatonin, which promotes sleep, Harvey explained.
But does it actually hurt sleep? Harvey said the survey doesn't prove that. Still, she suspects exposure to light is a problem. "No one's proven it yet, but it seems more than tempting to speculate fairly strongly," she noted.
Dr. Matt Travis Bianchi, a sleep specialist at Harvard Medical School in Boston, said the issue of light before sleep is complicated: not all kinds of light activate body cycles in the same way, and a little bit of light -- such as from a TV at a distance -- might still cause a problem.
Also, "we are very different in our sensitivity to light," he added. "I have on rare occasions had patients who were 'light-toxic,' in that if they got bright light late at night they couldn't sleep at all. Contrast that with patients I have who sleep with the light and TV on routinely, and don't have much problems that they can feel."
What can people try to do to sleep better?
Harvey recommends an electronic curfew. Also, "try to stick to a fairly regular wake time, get bright light in the morning and dim light at night, exercise regularly and have a bedtime routine of 30 to 60 minutes when you're letting yourself wind down," she suggested.
If you don't sleep well but can't bear to tear yourself away from the TV or computer before going to bed, Bianchi recommends trying a pair of "dampening glasses," which will filter out the most damaging light. You can try them, he said, and see if they make a difference.
He also said people should be aware that it may not be the light of a cell phone or computer that triggers sleep problems. It could be the anxiety produced when you, say, read an e-mail that makes you angry.
More information
For more about understanding sleep, try the U.S. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.
Copyright © 2011 HealthDay. All rights reserved.
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sleep disorders sleep behavior computers internet


Wednesday, February 05, 2014

The Good Sleep Guide



The Good Sleep Guide
During the evening
·        Put the day to rest. Think it through. Tie up “loose ends” in your mind and plan ahead. A notebook may help.
·        Take some light exercise early in the evening. Generally try to keep yourself fit.
·        Wind down during the course of the evening. Do not do anything that is mentally demanding within 90 minutes of bedtime.
·        Do not sleep or doze in the armchair. Keep your sleep for bedtime.
·        Do not drink too much coffee or tea and only have a light snack for supper. Do not drink alcohol to aid your sleep – it usually upsets sleep.
·        Make sure your bed and bedroom are comfortable – not to cold and not too warm.
At bedtime
·        Go to bed when you are “sleepy tired” and not before.
·        Do not read or watch TV in bed. Keep this activities for another room.
·        Set the alarm for the same time every day, seven days a week, at least until your sleep pattern settles down.
·        Put the light out when you get into bed.
·        Let yourself relax and tell yourself that “ sleep will come when it’s ready”. Enjoy relaxing even if you don’t at first fall asleep.
·        Do not try to fall asleep. Sleep is not something you can switch on deliverately but if you try it on you can switch it off!
If you have problems getting to sleep
·        Remember that sleep problems are quite common and they are not as demanding as you might think. Try not to get upset or frustrated.
·        If you are awake in bed for more than 20 minutes then get up and go into another room.
·        Do something relaxing for a while and do not worry about tomorrow. People usually cope quite well even after a sleepness night.
·        Go back to bed when you feel “sleepy tired”.
·        Remember the tips from the section above and use them again.
·        A good sleep pattern may take a number of weeks to establish. Be confident that you will achieve this in the end by working through “The Good Sleep Guide”.

This guide has been adapted from material originally prepared by Dr Collin Espie.