News Release
August 20, 2007
Contact: Christopher DeFrancesco, 860-679-3914
e-mail:
cdefrancesco@uchc.edu
Back to School, Back to Bed
But UConn Sleep Expert Says Wake-Up Time Is
the Key
FARMINGTON, CONN. – One of the most important things
parents can do to prepare their children for the new school year is
get their kids off of the summer clock, according to the medical
director of the Sleep Disorders Center at the University of
Connecticut Health Center.
Moving bed time up gradually each night leading to the first day
of school is an effective strategy. But more crucial than that, says
Daniel McNally, M.D., is what happens the following morning.
“If you’re up until midnight all summer then try to go to bed at
9 o’clock on the first school night, it doesn’t work,” McNally says.
“The answer to resetting your body’s clock is to go with what works
for biology, and the force that shapes your wake and sleep times is
the time you get up. Get up at a fixed time in the morning and get
lots of light when you awaken, and that will help shift your clock.
Starting a shift back to a consistent awakening time now rather than
waiting until the day before school starts will make for a more
comfortable transition.”
Light exposure first thing in the morning goes a long way in
overcoming sleep phase delay, which is especially common among high
school students. McNally says if their body clocks had their way,
they’d fall asleep at midnight or later and sleep for hours past
school’s opening bell.
“The image I have of a typical high school student is someone who
fell asleep after midnight,” McNally says. “When his alarm goes off,
he hits the snooze bar three, four, five times, and when he finally
gets up his eyes are barely open. He leaves for school with
sunglasses on and a hooded sweatshirt pulled over his eyes. It may
be several hours before he gets the kind of light exposure that
makes him truly awake and alert, and therefore less cranky and more
receptive to not only learning, but human interaction.”
McNally also recommends keeping sleep and wake times consistent
throughout the seven days of the week, maintaining a sleeping
environment that’s dark, comfortable and free of distractions, and
avoiding caffeine, particularly in the evening.
More information about the UConn Health Center’s Sleep Disorders
Center is available at:
http://health.uchc.edu/clinicalservices/sleep/index.htm.
The University of Connecticut Health Center includes the schools of
medicine and dental medicine, the UConn Medical Group, University
Dentists, and John Dempsey Hospital, a Solucient Top 100 Hospital®
2006. Founded in 1961, the Health Center pursues a mission of
providing outstanding health care education in an environment of
exemplary patient care, research and public service. To learn more about
the UConn Health Center, visit our website at
www.uchc.edu.
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