Posts Tagged ‘lack of sleep’



Sleep Solutions for Your Baby, Toddler, and Preschooler :: the blog: Sleep Book Reviews

This is the first is a series of sleep book mini-reviews that will be posted to this blog. These sleep book mini-reviews are mentioned in Appendix C of my brand new book Sleep Solutions for Your Baby, Toddler, and Preschooler: The Ultimate No-Worry Approach for Each Age and Stage. The purpose of these reviews is to help parents to zero in on additional sleep books that may be compatible with their child’s temperament, their parenting style, their family’s unique needs and circumstances, given what they have learned from reading my book.

Healthy Sleep Habits, Happy Child: A Step-by-Step Program for a Good Night’s Sleep
By Marc Weissbluth, MD
3rd Edition
Ballantine Books, 503 pages, $14.95 US/$22.95 Cdn

About the book:
Weissbluth explains the key role that sleep plays in allowing children to be at their best during the day—to achieve Weissbluth calls optimal wakefulness. He points out the link between sleep problems at night and a child’s behavior during the day: “Sleep problems not only disrupt a child’s nights, they disrupt his days, too, by making him less mentally alert, more inattentive, unable to concentrate, and easily distracted. They also make him more physically impulsive, hyperactive, or lazy. But when children sleep well, they are optimally awake and alert, able to learn and grow up with charm and humor.”

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Sleep: An Important Part Of Healthy Development

Sleep. It’s what all humans need. It is part of the rhythm of life and the life cycle. We know that babies sleep a lot. Babies spend more than half the day sleeping. Even by age two, a toddler spends more time asleep than awake. All in all, nearly 40 percent of childhood is spent sleeping.

Why do we need to sleep? Sleep is a necessary part of healthy brain functioning. The right amount of restful sleep is needed for our overall good health. Sleep has a direct influence on many of the body’s functions and helps the body to heal, grow, and stay on track. Recent studies have also linked the risk of obesity to not getting enough sleep. When we get the right amount of sleep, the brain will make chemicals that help control hunger and weight. The amount and quality of sleep we have can affect our safety, how alert we are, as well as our memories, moods, behavior, and learning abilities. Sleep is especially important for children’s learning.

How Much Sleep Do Children Need?

Sleep is as important to children’s development and well-being as nutrition and physical activity. Making sure children get enough rest is but one of many concerns of parents with young children. However, parents are often not sure how much sleep their children need and how much is enough sleep. Doctors and other experts have recommended the following amounts of sleep for children by age:

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10 Great Ways to Improve Sleep

Adults need about 8 to 10 hours of sleep per night. Without it you can wake up irritable, tired, memory problems, and headaches. Also you can fall asleep during the day, and have a lot of micro sleeps (when the body loses concentration for fractions of a second). The body needs rest to feel replenished and healthy. It is also important to have sleep to improve immune, brain functions, and to produce growth hormones.

Long-Term Lack of Sleep:

If you don’t get enough rest in the long term you can develop depression, irritability, stress, anxiety or obesity which are all serious illnesses. In some ones lifetime, up to 30% of our day is spent on sleep. It is essential to have enough quality sleep during the nights.

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Berkeley Parents Network: Waking at Night: 2 and 3 Year Olds

Berkeley Parents Network Home Members Post a Msg Reviews Advice Subscribe Help/FAQ What’s New
Waking at Night: 2 and 3 Year Olds Berkeley Parents Network > Advice > Sleep > > Waking at Night

  • 2-year-old used to sleep well, wakes at night now
  • 2-year-old has started waking up at 2:00 A.M.
  • 2.5 year old waking several times a night
  • 2.5 year old has never slept through the night
  • Setting up an “OK” time for 3-y-o to come into our bed
  • Night Terrors
  • More advice about waking at night

2-year-old used to sleep well, wakes at night now Feb 2004

I have a 2 year old who has always been a good sleeper and is now waking once or twice a night and having a hard time getting back to sleep. I checked the archives and noticed this doesn’t seem to be unconmmon. To parents who have 3 and 4 year olds who went through this at 2, does it go away on it’s own? Is this a phase that will pass without work or should I do something to help him through it. Currently, my husband or I go in and sleep on the floor but it’s tiering for us and I’m wondering if he’ll need us in there forever to be comfortable? Are we supporting him through a difficult developmental phase or are we creating a dependancy we will have to ”break” him from later. Let me know. Thanks! Sleepless

For what it’s worth, I am someone who recently posted a desperate e-mail about night- (and early-morning-) waking in my two-year-old, who up until then had been a champion sleeper. Her brother arrived just before she turned two, so I don’t know whether it was turning two, or the new addition to the family, but she just became a miserable, miserable sleeper — unable to fall asleep without having someone stay by her side for ages, waking up with terrible nightmares and unable to fall back asleep without yet more endless help, and then getting up to start the day sometimes as early as 4 a.m. I’m not really sure how we got through this, but yes, it DOES get better. My husband was in favor of indulging whatever requests she came up with — extra songs, lots of ”watching over her,” taking her into our bed (a big disaster), etc.; I was more inclined to try to nip things in the bud. In the end, we took a sort of middle road: he, the one willing to put up with everything, started putting her to bed, so at bedtime she got indulged — but ONLY as long as she was TRYING to fall asleep. If she was just playing around in her crib, or whining, or whatever, he would threaten to leave; if she lay there quietly with her eyes shut (although clearly suffering from some kind of anxious insomnia), he would stay quietly in the room for as long as it took, until she fell asleep. I would go to her for the night wakings, with a similar sort of approach. However, since we had the new little baby, eventually I would just get too exhausted to stay up with her, and amazingly, when I explained that I HAD to leave because I just couldn’t stay awake any longer, . . . she simply accepted that and went to sleep herself. Now, at 2-1/2, she often falls asleep without much trouble and when she (rarely) wakes during the night, a quick visit is enough to get her right back to sleep. I do think she benefitted from the extra comforting we gave her — maybe this helped her eventually to feel a bit more relaxed and confident – - but it was also interesting to see that she really didn’t NEED all of the comforting she had been demanding.

Or, . . . maybe she just grew out of it!

2-year-old has started waking up at 2:00 A.M. May 2002
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Best Medication For Insomnia And Depression

Best Medication For Insomnia And Depression

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Ten Ways To Sleep Better

Your HealthTen Ways To Sleep Better Susan Yara 09.07.05, 12:01 AM ET

Americans don’t get enough sleep. A poll conducted by the National Sleep Foundation in 2002 showed that approximately 74% of the population has trouble sleeping at some point in their lives. And the root of the problem might simply be our lifestyles.

Hectic work schedules, lack of downtime and the change in seasons can make anyone feel more stressed than usual, leading to nocturnal tossing and turning. According to Dr. Gary Zammit, Director for the Sleep Disorders Institute at St. Luke’s Roosevelt Hospital in New York City, about 9% to 18% of adults actually suffer from chronic insomnia and aren’t able to sleep for a few days or longer.

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Sleep and aging.

Sleep and aging

According to various studies and reports, we in general seem to sleep less and for shorter periods, as we get older. In our quest for a holistic approach to anti-aging skin care, we decided to delve a little deeper into the effects that sleep has on the aging process.

sleep, aging, human, growth, hormone

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Overview – Sleep Disorders

Overview

Sleep is absolutely essential for normal, healthy function. Scientists and medical professionals still have much to learn about this complicated physiological phenomenon. According to the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, about 40 million people in the United States suffer from chronic long-term sleep disorders each year and an additional 20 million people experience occasional sleep problems.



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Chapter 3. Sleep Aid Remedy Overview

3. Sleep Aid Remedies overview of Sleep aid tips site content

Sleep aid tips about sleep remedy overview when using this site to search for information and remedies for your better sleep which may also cure any mild sleep disorder you may want a natural sleep aid remedy for.

Summary of some sleeping aids & remedies described in greater detail and with recipes and instructions, in the following pages.

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How Aging Affects Sleep in Adults and the Elderly

Sleep Disorders: How Does Aging Affect Sleep?

More than half of men and women over the age of 65 years complain of at least one sleep problem. Many older people experience insomnia and other sleep difficulties on a regular basis.

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Recent Comments
  • Clara Edwards: Our daughter had been an erratic sleeper (much of it our fault, in retrospect) and frequently ended up...
  • Emilio Gonzalez: Ferber does a good job of describing what happens when you sleep. Apparently everyone wakes up in...
  • Roberta Reid: I guess my main problem with Ferber was the way that it’s an exact, rigid theory or philosophy....
  • Amber Laws: We were careful to put him in bed before he was completely asleep so he could adjust to the idea of being...
  • Debbie Hubbard: Good luck.posted by dragonsi55 at 7:07 AM on September 29, 2006
  • Douglas Witherell: This idea that you can have a child sleeping quietly in three days is more to appease the parents,...
  • Robert Spangler: The “Cry it out” method didn’t work on him — what did work was something...
  • William Aguilar: The thing is, children are not interchangable. For varying reasons, some kids sleep well righr away...
  • Robin Kelly: We got a baby massage book and started “bedtime” about 30 minutes before we put him down for...
  • Jessica Miller: That being said, rdurbin already wrote down everything I wanted to say–especially the part...
  • Justin Schultz: An idea? To appease us? We spent many months with various techniques that didn’t work, Ferber...
  • Linda Allmon: The second one was a preemie (about 7 weeks) and it literally took years for him to settle into a good...
  • Tara Mccandless: But they do, frequently, until their child is asleep. Have you read any other part of it than the...
  • Darrell Jones: I agree with the being present and patting on the back and telling him it is night night time while...
  • Todd Mcclelland: I think even if you don’t use his process, he’s got a lot of interesting things to say...