- Staff
- #1
*Practicing good sleep hygiene:
● Sleep according to your circadian rhythms. 10pm-6am or 11pm-7am.
● Every hour you get to sleep before midnight is like 2 hours in the sleep bank!
● 7-10 hours of sleep plus a 20 min nap is optimal depending on your age and workload. (More than 20-30 minutes and you may begin Deep or REM sleep which will make you groggy when you wake up).
● Wake up at the same time every day, 7 days a week, this helps set the clock making it easier to get to sleep at night.
● Sleep in a pitch black room with blackout blinds. Turn off ALL appliances, nightlights etc...
● Sleep in a Quiet room or use earplugs or earphones.
● Don’t take stimulants like caffeine or drink too many fluids too close to bedtime.
● Some carbohydrates in your meal about 2 hours before bed has been shown to help with the quality of sleep and helps prevent waking. The brain doesn’t sleep and doesn’t stop using glycogen all night so if the brain gets hungry it will cause the release of adrenaline and cortisol to get glucose from muscle tissue (gluconeogenesis).
● No TV or phone within an hour of bed (the bright light prevents melatonin secretion). Wearing blue light blocking glasses will help reduce the waking impact of electronics on the eyes.
● Take Vit D3 If blood levels are low. 60-80 ng/dL is the optimal range. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5541280/
● Children and pets should sleep in a separate bed.
● Sleep according to your circadian rhythms. 10pm-6am or 11pm-7am.
● Every hour you get to sleep before midnight is like 2 hours in the sleep bank!
● 7-10 hours of sleep plus a 20 min nap is optimal depending on your age and workload. (More than 20-30 minutes and you may begin Deep or REM sleep which will make you groggy when you wake up).
● Wake up at the same time every day, 7 days a week, this helps set the clock making it easier to get to sleep at night.
● Sleep in a pitch black room with blackout blinds. Turn off ALL appliances, nightlights etc...
● Sleep in a Quiet room or use earplugs or earphones.
● Don’t take stimulants like caffeine or drink too many fluids too close to bedtime.
● Some carbohydrates in your meal about 2 hours before bed has been shown to help with the quality of sleep and helps prevent waking. The brain doesn’t sleep and doesn’t stop using glycogen all night so if the brain gets hungry it will cause the release of adrenaline and cortisol to get glucose from muscle tissue (gluconeogenesis).
● No TV or phone within an hour of bed (the bright light prevents melatonin secretion). Wearing blue light blocking glasses will help reduce the waking impact of electronics on the eyes.
● Take Vit D3 If blood levels are low. 60-80 ng/dL is the optimal range. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5541280/
● Children and pets should sleep in a separate bed.