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Back-To-School Takes
Toll on Parents' Sleep
Excerpt
By Steven Reinberg, HealthDay
One of three parents finds back-to-school
time the most hectic time of the year, and one of three also reports
losing sleep during September, a new survey finds.
"Parents need to be aware
of their own sleep issues during the back-to-school season,"
says Dr. Rafael Pelayo, an assistant professor at Stanford University's
Sleep Disorders Clinic. "When kids start school, we focus
a lot on children's issues. It's really about family, and parents,
too, are under stress this time of the year."
During this time, parents many
be having trouble sleeping. To meet all the demands on their time
from work and their children, parents tend to get up earlier and
go to bed later. They may also have changed their sleep routine
during the summer and now want to get back to the sleep routine
that they have during the school year, Pelayo says.
"You cannot change your sleep
patterns overnight," he says. In addition, parents who have
had sleep problems during the summer will find these problems
getting worse as they try to change their sleep pattern.
Pelayo says that in the fall, all
of a sudden you have to get up earlier to get the kids out the
door. Plus, you have added responsibility at night, when you have
to make sure the kids get all their work done and are ready for
school.
Parents should not ignore their
own sleeping trouble, Pelayo says. "You need to know that
medical help is available for sleep problems, and you can consult
your doctor. Medications for sleep are better then they have ever
been, and people should be open-minded about using them,"
he advises.
Pelayo agrees that other ways of
helping parents and children get enough sleep include creating
a bedtime routine, with regular bedtimes and wake-up times, starting
school preparations early in the evening, and limiting the number
of after-school activities.
Since it takes from a few days
to a few weeks to change sleep patterns, ideally parents should
start making the changes in their sleep routine a week or two
before school starts, not just a couple of days before, Pelayo
advises.
"We need to give sleep the
same importance we give diet and exercise," Pelayo says.
Harris Interactive conducted the
survey. The pollsters interviewed 2,687 adults 18 years of age
and older. Among these, 662 were parents with school-aged children.
The pharmaceutical company Sanofi-Synthelabo, the makers of Ambien,
a sleep medication, sponsored the survey.
Russell Rosenberg, director of
the Northside Hospital Sleep Medicine Institute in Atlanta and
a spokesman for the National Sleep Foundation, says this is the
time of the year parents are most sleep-deprived.
Rosenberg stresses that another
consequence of losing sleep is drowsy driving, which he says is
an epidemic and puts people at a much higher risk for car crashes.
We tend to be sleepy in the afternoon,
Rosenberg notes. "At 3 o'clock when you are picking up your
child and you haven't slept well, you are really putting yourself
and other kids at risk for a car accident."
Rosenberg recommends taking naps,
going to bed earlier than one does during the summer, and to take
sleep seriously and get more.
More information
To learn more about sleep problems,
visit the National
Sleep Foundation or the National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
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