Sleep Habits
Tips for a Healthy Night's Sleep
- Sleep only as much as you need to feel refreshed during the following day. Restricting your time in bed helps to consolidate and deepen your sleep. Excessively long times in bed lead to fragmented and shallow sleep. Get up at your regular time the next day, no matter how little you slept.
- Get up at the same time each day, seven days a week. A regular wake time in the morning leads to regular times of sleep onset, and helps to set your biological clock.
- Exercise regularly. Schedule exercise times so that they do not occur within three hours of when you intend to go to bed. Exercise makes it easier to initiate sleep and deepen sleep.
- Don’t take your problems to bed. Plan some time earlier in the evening for working on your problems or planning the next day’s activities. Worrying may interfere with initiating sleep and produce shallow sleep.
- Train yourself to use the bedroom only for sleep and sexual activity. This will help condition your brain to see bed as the place for sleeping. Do not read, watch TV or eat in bed.
- Do not try to fall asleep. This only makes the problem worse. Instead, turn on the light, leave the bedroom, and do something different like reading a book. Don’t engage in stimulating activity. Return to bed only when you feel sleepy.
- Avoid long naps. Staying awake during the day helps to fall asleep at night. Naps totaling more than 30 minutes increase your chances of having trouble sleeping at night.
- Make sure your bedroom is comfortable and free from light and noise. A comfortable, noise-free sleep environment will reduce the likelihood that you will wake up during the night. Noise that does not wake you may still disturb the quality of your sleep. Carpeting, insulated curtains and closing the door may help.
- Make sure your bedroom is at a comfortable temperature during the night. Excessively warm or cold sleep environments may disturb sleep.
- Eat regular meals and do not go to bed hungry. Hunger may disturb sleep. A light snack at bedtime (especially carbohydrates) may help sleep, but avoid greasy or heavy foods.
- Avoid excessive liquids in the evening. Reducing liquid intake will minimize the need for nighttime trips to the bathroom.
- Cut down on all caffeine products. Caffeinated beverages and food, such as coffee, tea, cola or chocolate can cause difficulty falling asleep, awakenings during the night, and shallow sleep. Even caffeine early in the day can disrupt nighttime sleep.
- Avoid alcohol, especially in the evening. Although alcohol helps tense people fall asleep more easily, it causes awakenings later in the night.
- Smoking may disturb sleep. Nicotine is a stimulant. Try not to smoke during the night when you have trouble sleeping.
- Adapted from “The Diagnosis of Primary Insomnia and Treatment Alternatives,” by M. L. Perlis and S. Youngstead.
For more information, call 828.315.3863.
To schedule a sleep study, please call 828.315.3390, option 1.
Frye Regional Medical Center staff is available to help with pre-authorization needed for sleep studies.