Archive for the 'Sleep Education' Category
Managing Jetlag through Food Intake
0 Comments Published by Brian Yalung May 22nd, 2008 in Health Issues, How to sleep better, SLEEP News, Sleep Disorders, Sleep Education.
For most people who have to travel a lot, you will certainly stumble into certain periods where you have to adjust to the time zone of a certain country. For some countries like traveling from the Philippines to the United States, there are varying differences in time like 12 hours of difference.
In these cases, you will often find yourself supposedly sleeping at their peak time to which you have to adjust because your body will not be able to take it for sure. However, one element in all of this can make a difference and this has to do with the food and meals that this voyager would take in between the time shifts.
“A period of fasting with no food at all for about 16 hours is enough to engage this new clock,” says Prof Saper, who did the work with Drs Patrick Fuller and Jun Lu.
“So, in this case, simply avoiding any food on the plane, and then eating as soon as you land, should help you to adjust - and avoid some of the uncomfortable feelings of jet lag.”
The next time you have to adjust your sleeping period, consider the meals you take. A small fasting sacrifice can really make a difference.
(Source) Telegraph.co.uk
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A Sleeping Sickness called African Trypanosomiasis
0 Comments Published by Brian Yalung May 14th, 2008 in SLEEP News, Sleep Disorders, Sleep Education.
We have heard of a lot of sleeping illnesses lingering around the world today and apparently most of them come from varying origins. Sleep disorders and issues are rampant and are continuously causing pains and problems for people. Here is another one of those sleep sickness called the African Trypanosomiasis.
The disease, endemic in southeast Uganda and western Kenya, is caused by parasites and transmitted to humans by tsetse flies. It kills more than 40,000 Africans each year and the animal form of the disease (nagana) kills two million cattle each year.
IT starts with a headache, joint pains and fever. It is the kind you would expect to get over quickly. But after a while, things get worse. You fall asleep most of the time, are confused and get intense pains and convulsions.
If you do not get treatment, your body begins to waste away. Eventually, you slip into coma and die.
So you may say that this disease may eventually be transmitted unseen as the said parasites can easily make their way to your body. So if you think you have the symptoms mentioned above, better have your doctor check you out.
(Source) AllAfrica.com
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May Is Sleep Awareness Month
0 Comments Published by Brian Yalung May 1st, 2008 in How to sleep better, SLEEP News, Sleep Education, Sleep Events.
As far as sleep issues are concerned, there is no better time to schedule Sleep Awareness month than in the month of May. To most people, sleep issues are minor, but if you think about it, sleep disorders can become a problem if and when you don’t put it in check.
A lot of people can attest to this fact. Sleep, normally seen as something that can be remedied with the right resources including own will power, has become serious and a threat to a person’s overall risk. Insomnia is becoming serious and has even gone as far as affecting the various human body parts to which people are slowly becoming concerned.
With that in mind, the move to improve on sleep awareness has to start. May has become the month to make it all happen.
If you’re having trouble falling asleep lately, you’re not alone, thousands of Americans survive the day on very little sleep. But that can be unhealthy and even dangerous.
For a lot of people sleep remains at the bottom of the priority list, but a local sleep doctor tells me that can limit your productivity at work and if you’re like me, you’ll be happy to hear, naps are a good thing.
(Source) Kidk.com
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A Book on Good Baby Sleep Programs
0 Comments Published by Brian Yalung April 28th, 2008 in How to sleep better, SLEEP News, Sleep Disorders, Sleep Education.
Here is something good for all parents who want to find out how to put their babies to sleep the right way. Today, most people look for good ways to be able to achieve maximum potential as far as providing babies and infants with good sleep practices. Some still turn to the usual sleep specialists or pediatricians who in turn may prescribe some meds or some unorthodox practices.
But with this new book, a 90-minute baby sleep program, you can find something useful if you are experiencing problems on how to put your child to sleep.
(Source) BDN.com
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Sleep Worsens Through Age
0 Comments Published by Brian Yalung April 25th, 2008 in Health Issues, SLEEP News, Sleep Education, Sleep Issues.
The good news is you will get to sleep more as you get to that retirement age. The bad news is that sleeping problems are expected to worsen as you reach this age. With these two things in mind, you may be asking if growing old is indeed something great to look forward to.
Apparently, these are health related. The abuses our bodies have had in the years of our lives are contributory marks towards getting good sleep. But while we yearn for good sleep once we reach these latter ages, perhaps it would be best to assess ourselves at this point to see how our future holds for us realistically.
One report finds persistent insomnia can lead to depression in the elderly, especially in those getting standard care for depression in primary care settings. The study looked at 1,801 elderly patients aged 60 or older with major depression. It shows patients with persistent insomnia were 1.8 to 3.5 times more likely to remain depressed compared with patients without insomnia.
Another new study finds older people with cognitive impairment are more likely to have sleep problems. The 102 participants were between the ages of 59 and 96, had a clinical diagnosis of cognitive impairment, slept an average of seven hours or less each night, and slept during the day for 30 minutes or longer. Results show 21.6 percent of them had at least one painful condition and 45.1 percent were diagnosed with depression.
(Source) Medical Breakthroughs
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