Wellness
Stress & sleep
By Karen Babos, DO, MBA Mar 21, 2022 • 1 min
According to the National Institutes of Health, most adults do best with 7-8 hours of sleep; teens need more – usually 9-10 hours of sleep. How much do we actually get? About 1-2 hours less than we need.
Health benefits of sleep
- Keeping a healthy weight. When you do not have enough sleep, you do not make good food choices and you skip exercise because you are too tired.
- Better mental performance and improved memory. Ever try to take a test or learn something new without a good night’s sleep?
- Improved physical functioning. Good sleep makes for better athletic performance.
- Stronger immune system. Yes, it is true – you can fight off infections and improve vaccine effectiveness if you get good sleep.
- Accident avoidance. Driving while sleep-deprived can be as bad as driving drunk.
- Healthy mental state. Your mood is better after a good night’s sleep and you are less likely to become depressed.
Stress & sleep
- Acknowledge stressors and change what you can.
- Repeat successes in your head before bedtime. What went “right” today? What did you accomplish?
- Practice good sleep habits. Go to bed at the same time and wake up at the same time each day.
- Eat healthy, with less sugars and fats, smaller frequent meals. Exercise regularly, but not late in the day. Avoid caffeine and alcohol after dinner..
- Decompress before bedtime – do not do work or emails.
- Seek help if stress is continually keeping you awake. You may need to see your health care provider, a counselor or a sleep specialist.