Showing posts with label family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family. Show all posts

Friday, December 22, 2017

Not a Creature Was Stirring (Yeah. Right.)

Tis the season for friends, family and celebration... if you're an adult.

If you're a kid, it's more like the season of  uncomfortable holiday outfits, long car rides and seemingly endless family gatherings full of strange looking foods and even stranger looking people.

Compound these disruptions in routine with the decided lack of sleep that kids - much like the rest of us - experience around the holidays, it seems unfair to blame them for their inevitable meltdown, doesn't it?

The holidays are hard enough for kids. Ensuring children get the recommended amount of sleep year-round can go a long way toward ensuring a healthy, happy holiday for the whole family.

The National Sleep Foundation (NSF)  recommends the following:
  • 11-13 hours of sleep for preschoolers age 3-5
  • 10-11 hours of sleep for 5 to 12 year olds
  • 9 hours or more for teens

Here are some tips for helping your little ones get enough sleep:
  • Make sure the room is quiet, dark, cool, and uncluttered.
    Bold colors and flashy décor might be a great fashion statement but you want a serene sanctuary.
  • Remove all electronics from the room. 
    Electronic devices are designed to keep the brain engaged, making it more difficult to get to sleep at night. In addition, the light emitted from these devices limits the body’s release of melatonin, which helps us transition into our nighttime sleep cycle.
  • Establish a nighttime reading routine.
    NSF has found that children who read as part of their bedtime routine are more likely to get healthy amounts of sleep.


Thursday, June 15, 2017

This Father’s Day, Give Dad a Gift He Can Really Use: A Nap


Manisha Parulekar, M.D.
Hackensack University Medical Center


Please, no more ties or gold-toe socks. And save the power tools for Christmas.
This Father’s Day, give Dad a gift he can really use: A nap.

Napping has often been written off as a guilty pleasure, but a new study suggests that an afternoon nap may be a brain booster for those 65 and older.

The study of nearly 3,000 adults aged 65 and older found that those who had taken an hour nap after lunch showed improved memory, clearer thinking and increased cognitive performance than those who did not nap or took a shorter or longer nap.

The people who napped for an hour after lunch performed better on the brain function tests than those who didn't nap at all, and those who slept for an hour also outperformed the people who slept for less than an hour or more than an hour, the findings showed.

Study participants who either didn't nap, or took short naps or very long naps had declines in their mental abilities that were up to six times greater than those who slept for an hour in the afternoon.

“This study shows that a nap after lunch may be part of a healthy lifestyle for older adults, whereas naps at other times of the day might affect night time sleep,” says Manisha Parulekar, M.D., of Hackensack University Medical Center.

So for adults, it all comes down to the question of, to nap or not to nap? Still unsure which is the right choice for you? Read more here!

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Don't Let Holiday Stress Keep You Awake at Night

With Thanksgiving less than a day away, and just a month until Christmas, we're once again reminded how quickly "the most wonderful time of the year" can also become the most stressful.

Family. Finances. A tree in your house. Holiday stressors can feel immense when they all seem to hit at once, and in today's society, it's almost commonplace to simply "give in" to our anxieties keeping us awake at night.

According to a recent article in the New York Times,  Why Sleep Matters, nearly a quarter of Americans don't get enough shut-eye because they're too busy “concentrating on things."

 As commonplace as it may seem, however, losing sleep to stress is unhealthy and counterproductive.

"Lack of sleep can contribute to numerous health issues, including higher prevalence of chronic pain, high blood pressure, obesity, Type 2 diabetes, heart disease and premature aging," says Carol Ash, D.O., Director of Sleep Medicine for Meridian Health.

In addition to restoring the immune system, sleep is vital to the energy and focus necessary to handling the life's most stressful situations head on. To break the stress-insomnia-stress cycle and get to sleep when your mind is in overdrive, Dr. Ash recommends a few different techniques.

"Find a cause. Studies show volunteering and pro bono work helps create external focus and connects us to others," Dr. Ash says. "These types of commitments help people find purpose and meaning in life, which can help eliminate racing thoughts at night."

"For a more immediate solution, try deep breaths," she adds. "Mindful breathing helps you relax and clear your mind prior to bedtime."