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Discover the importance of good sleep hygiene and practical tips to improve your sleep quality. Learn about the varying sleep needs throughout different stages of life, effective relaxation techniques, ideal surroundings for sleep, dietary considerations, and the impact of exercise and consistency on your sleep patterns.
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Sleep Hygiene Shereen De Barr (soon to be Smith) DRC 3.2.10
How much do we need? • Popular idea is 7-8 hours • Studies show we need 4-10 hours • Varies in lifetime • Newborn – 16 hours • 5 yr old – 11 hours • Teens – 9 hours • 30’s - <8 hours • 70’s - <6 hours, and lighter sleep
Tell patients • Reminder that lack of sleep will not “hurt” you • You will fall asleep eventually • Lying calm and relaxed can be as refreshing as sleep • Don’t look at the time • Tell yourself you don’t care if you sleep or not • Think pleasant thoughts – holiday/lottery winner
Worries keeping you up • Get out of bed • Sit somewhere comfortable • Write down the problems on your mind • Take each problem and write solutions • Write steps to reach solutions • Write obstacles you fear may prevent steps • Say “ok, that’s it for now. I can’t do anything more about it this time of night. I won’t worry till morning. • UNWIND – 30mins reading/music • Back to bed
Good Habits • Don’t sleep in the day, max 25mins • Recognise you may not actually need more sleep • Surroundings • Food and Drink • Avoid Cigarettes • Avoid Alcohol • Consistency • Pre-sleep routine • Tiredness • Activity
Surroundings • Too noisy? Too quiet? • fan/white noise/earplugs/music • Too light? Too dark? • TURN OFF MOBILE/computer/lights • Mattress comfort • Only use bed for sleep and sex, don’t associate the bed with work • Too hot? • Experiment with windows open, low temp better, as body cools, goes to sleep
NO TV • Television actually stimulates the mind, rather than relaxing it • Late night TV often violent • Light and noise • Wean off if you are used to it, better in long run
Diet • Avoid eating a large meal within two hours of bed. • Make dinnertime earlier in the evening • avoid heavy, rich foods as bedtime snacks • A light snack before bed can help promote sleep • Glass of warm milk and half a sandwich • Whole-grain, low-sugar cereal • A banana and a cup of hot chamomile tea • Drinking lots of fluid may result in frequent bathroom trips throughout the night
Diet • Absolutely NO tea, coffee, hot chocolate or coca cola within 4 hours of bed – affects sleep 10-12 hrs after drinking • Absolutely No cigarettes within 4 hours of bed – but nicotine withdrawal can wake you up.. • Don’t drink alcohol
Exercise • Exercise in morning or early afternoon • Good for mental health • Causes increased tiredness
Consistency • Go to bed and wake up at same time each day • Make your bedtime when you feel tired • Don’t break this routine on weekends, lie-ins reset your body-clock • If you want to change your bedtime, small increments, 15 minutes earlier or later each day
Don’t go to bed too Early • Do something mildly stimulating to prevent yourself from falling asleep too early • If you push though that window, you’ll catch your second wind soon and be able to stay awake until your normal bedtime—and sleep through the night
Getting back to Sleep • Deep breathing • Progressive muscle relaxation • Visualizing a peaceful, restful place • Stay relaxed • Do a quiet activity – reading, writing, ironing • Concentrate on relaxing, not stressing
References • Patient.co.uk • Mentor on the web (EMIS)