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Many Women Are Starved for Sleep
Start with the stresses of work and
family. Add household responsibilities and perhaps worry about
an elderly parent. Then factor in the hormonal changes that come
with being female, and it should come as no surprise many women
are shortchanged on sleep.
Yet many don't realize it.
"There are very few times
in a woman's life when something doesn't interfere with her sleep.
Sleep disorders are very common -- and under-diagnosed -- in women,"
says Dr. Meir Kryger, director of the Sleep Disorder Clinic at
St. Boniface Hospital Research Center at the University of Manitoba.
That's not to say men don't suffer
from sleep problems, too. But women fall into their own category
of sleep deprivation, says Kryger, author of a book on women and
sleep that will be published next spring.
"There are many sleep problems
that men don't ever have, like the sleepiness of pregnancy, waking
up for breast-feeding and hot flashes," he says. "Further,
the most common sleep problem is insomnia, and in every single
age group beginning at adolescence, women are two times more likely
to have insomnia than are men."
Compounding the problem, says Dr.
Suzanne Griffin, a Georgetown University psychiatrist who specializes
in sleep disorders, is that many women don't realize they are
prone to sleep deprivation.
Some come to her saying they think
they have attention-deficit disorder or depression. When asked
about sleep, they'll say they're sleeping fine, even though they're
going to bed at 2 a.m. and getting up at 6 a.m.
"Women don't pay attention
to sleep deprivation," Griffin says. "They tend not
to ascribe their symptoms to sleep deprivation even when there
is a clear connection."
She adds that many women tend to
stay up later at night "because it's the only quiet time
they have for themselves." Everyone's asleep, the laundry
is done, and they can finally have some personal time.
Women and men need between seven
and eight hours of sleep a night to perform optimally, Griffin
says. Less sleep leads to poor concentration, irritability and
fatigue, which can mimic symptoms of other health problems.
"Sleep should be up there
with diet and exercise as necessary for good health," she
says.
The problem of sleep deprivation
among women is widespread, according to the National Sleep Foundation,
which polled 1,000 women ages 30 to 60 for a 1998 survey.
Some findings:
- 74 percent of women sleep less
than eight hours a night during the work week; the average sleep
time was six hours and 41 minutes.
- 31 percent of women reported
using caffeinated beverages, over-the-counter medications or
prescription drugs to help them stay awake during the previous
year.
- 50 percent of women drove while
drowsy, and 14 percent dozed off at the wheel in the previous
year.
Kryger says one particular sleep
problem, sleep apnea, can have serious health consequences. The
condition, with symptoms that include snoring, morning headaches
and daytime fatigue, occurs when a person stops breathing for
10 seconds or more during sleep. It is associated with high blood
pressure and cardiovascular disease, and is estimated to affect
some 18 million Americans.
Because sleep apnea occurs twice
as often in men as women, due to differences in anatomy, it's
often under-diagnosed in women.
"There's a stereotypical idea
that sleep apnea is a man's problem, so doctors are not looking
for it in women, and it can go undiagnosed for many years,"
Kryger says.
Griffin says it's important for
women to realize they might suffer from sleep deprivation.
If testing rules out apnea or one
of a number of other conditions like restless leg syndrome, it
could be that stress, anxiety or poor sleep habits are causing
the sleep interruptions. The doctor can then tell the patient
how to start practicing good sleep hygiene, Griffin says.
This includes going to bed and
getting up at the same time every night and morning; using the
bedroom for sleep and sex only (no television); restricting sleep
time to six and a half hours so the person is a little tired but
not sleep deprived, enabling her to sleep better the next night;
eliminating caffeine; having small frequent meals and exercising
early in the day.
Short-term use of medications is
another option. Today's sleep medicines aren't addictive and don't
make you feel groggy, Griffin says.
The key is to seek help, Kryger
says.
"If someone has a sleep problem,
it usually doesn't get better on its own," he says.
More information
Tips for better sleeping can be
found at the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration. Take this quiz from the National
Institutes of Health to see how much you know about sleep.
Reference
Source 101
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