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Aging News & Information
Harvard Wants America to Sleep Better and
Contributes New Interactive Website
‘Health Sleep’ aimed at helping people better
understand sleep
Feb.
27, 2008 – A topic that always gets high readership among senior
citizens reading SeniorJournal.com is sleep. It sometimes seems that a
better nights rest is a universal quest among older people. Now, even
the Harvard Medical School is trying to help with a new Website aimed at
helping people better understand sleep. Although it addresses sleep
problems at all ages, there are special reports and videos just for
older people.
“Aristotle argued that sleep is the direct result
of warm vapors rising from the stomach during digestion. Though modern
sleep research eclipses the musings of the Greek philosopher, the public
and many physicians remain trapped in a bygone age, ignorant of what
constitutes healthy sleep as well as sleep deficits and disorders and
the toll they take on society,” says the Harvard announcement.
“In 2006, an Institute of Medicine committee called
for a well-coordinated strategy to correct this problem.”
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Aging News & Information |
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Now, Harvard Medical School’s (HMS’s) Division of
Sleep Medicine has launched a “Healthy Sleep” website in collaboration
with WGBH Educational Foundation to help the general public understand
sleep.
Through videos, essays and interactive features, visitors learn
about the science of sleep, why sleep matters, and how to get the sleep
they need.
The initial web pages will serve as a springboard
for future modules, laying the foundation for more advanced topics such
as sleep disorder specifics.
“The site presents information in layers, allowing
individuals to explore sleep in as little or great depth as they wish,”
says Stuart Quan, interim editor-in-chief of the site and a visiting
professor in the Division of Sleep Medicine.
“Although sleep is a biological necessity,
consuming about one-third of our lives, there’s little education about
it, even during medical school,” says Steven Shea, who is editor of the
first module of the site.
Shea—an HMS Associate Professor in the
Division of Sleep Medicine and Director of the Sleep Disorders Research
Program at Brigham and Women’s Hospital—adds, “Researchers have made
some major discoveries about sleep over the last few decades and it’s
important to bring these to the doctors and the public.”
Studies show, for example, that sleep deprivation
interferes with immune function, metabolism and other key processes in
ways that could trigger disease.
Division of Sleep Medicine faculty
present these connections and acknowledge where research is ongoing in
video clips and essays. They also highlight some of the burdens society
bears when individuals don’t get enough sleep.
The Chernobyl nuclear reactor meltdown and the
Exxon Valdez oil spill both occurred at night, when crews were working
with little sleep, and drowsy driving causes more than 100,000 crashes
in the United States each year, according to an estimate by the National
Highway Traffic Administration.
The experts also dispense advice to people
suffering from sleep problems, including a video case study in which
viewers can actually observe a doctor providing a successful strategy to
overcome lifelong insomnia in a particular patient. Site visitors who
suspect they have a sleeping disorder can take a survey to determine if
they too should seek treatment.
Also included are cultural and historical
perspectives on sleep, going as far back as Homer’s reference in the
Odyssey to the segmented sleep pattern that was commonplace for
centuries.
"Adequate sleep is important to our overall health,
safety, and performance, just like diet and exercise. While medicine has
many tools to help maintain health, people need to know what they can do
for themselves," says Michael Twery, Ph.D., Director of the National
Heart Lung and Blood Institute's National Center on Sleep Disorders
Research.
"The Healthy Sleep Website developed by Harvard
Medical School and WGBH Educational Foundation makes an important
contribution as a public resource that can help people understand why
sleep is important, recognize sleep problems, and discuss sleep-related
health problems with their physicians."
Editor’s Notes:
Funding for this website was provided by Cephalon,
Sanofi-Aventis, Sepracor and Takeda Pharmaceuticals of North America.
Strict editorial ethics and compliance standards, which can be found at
this link –
click, ensure that a ‘firewall’ is maintained between these funders
and site content. A committee composed of experts from outside Harvard
Medical School reviews all content to ensure that it is accurate and
free of bias.
Original report written by Alyssa Kneller
Harvard Medical School has more than 7,500 full-time faculty working
in 11 academic departments located at the School's Boston campus or in
one of 47 hospital-based clinical departments at 17 Harvard-affiliated
teaching hospitals and research institutes.
>>
Harvard’s Healthy Sleep Website
>>
Changes in Sleep with Age (specific links for seniors)
More links about sleep and senior citizens
Sleep Problems Among the Elderly Linked to Suicide
Risk
Many older adults get less sleep than needed due to
trouble falling asleep - June 14, 2007
Sleep Disruption Linked to Increased Cardiovascular
Risk
Certain sleep disruptions
such as obstructive sleep apnea known to convey extensive cardiovascular
risk -
March 30, 2007
Mistake for Doctors to Neglect Insomnia Treatment in
Older Patients
Excessive daytime sleepiness is best predictor of
poor health
January 3, 2007
Tips for Senior Citizens to Get a Good Nights Sleep
Offered by Longevity Center
New report issued: The Role of Sleep In Healthy
Aging
December 7, 2006
Sleep Studies of Older People Find Behavioral
Treatment Helps Insomnia; Women Endangered by Restless Legs
October 2, 2006
Sleep Evaluation Should be Routine Medical Care Says Editorial
September 18, 2006
Advice for Senior Citizens on Finding a Good Night's Sleep
Research finds that sleep problems
grow with the accumulation of illnesses, not years.
September 18, 2006
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