PRESS RELEASE
Don’t Lose Sleep When Daylight Saving Time Returns (April 3, 2003)
  • The National Sleep Foundation and BAMC Sleep Disorders Center Offer Tips to Help Children and Parents “Spring Forward”

(Marinette, Wis.) – It happens in the middle of the night once a year, and can affect you and your children several days. It’s the return of Daylight Saving Time, which happens this year at 2:00 a.m. Sunday, April 6 for most of the nation. This annual “spring forward” ritual can cause disruptions in normal sleep patterns for children and adults. However, the National Sleep Foundation (NSF) and the Bay Area Medical Center Sleep Disorders Center say there are steps you can take to minimize the sleep loss and enjoy the benefits of healthy sleep and productive days.

“ It is not uncommon for children to experience sleep disruptions with the return of Daylight Saving Time,” says Jodi Mindell, PhD, a nationally recognized expert in pediatric sleep and a member of NSF’s board of directors. “It may take your child longer to fall asleep with the time change. Since we move the clock forward, he or she may not be as sleepy as usual at bedtime,” says Dr. Mindell, a professor of psychology at St. Joseph’s University in Philadelphia, and associate director of the Sleep Disorders Center at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.

To help your child make that adjustment, Dr. Mindell offers these two tips to ease the transition and keep sleep deprivation at a minimum:

  • Maintain your child’s regular sleep, wake and nap times. Try not to compensate for the lost hour by delaying bedtime or allowing your child to sleep in. This will increase the time it takes to transition.
  • Make gradual adjustments. Some parents find it is best to try to start making adjustments on Saturday night rather than wait until Sunday, a school night. You might even want to try making a slow transition starting on Thursday night before the time change, moving your child’s bedtime earlier by 15 minutes each night. By Sunday night you will be right back on schedule.

Now for parents, who, like their children, can also experience sleep loss and schedule disruptions because of the time change. NSF polls reveal that most adults already get less than the recommended seven to nine hours of nightly sleep needed to be fully alert the next day. “Too many people will sacrifice yet another hour of sleep when the clocks change. Its an hour they cannot afford to lose, particularly on the weekend, when people try to catch up on the sleep they missed during the week,” says Teri Doughty, Supervisor of the BAMC Sleep Disorders Center.

By making a few simple lifestyle changes, most people can achieve the sleep that is needed to feel alert, refreshed and ready to take on the day. NSF and the BAMC Sleep Disorders Center offer these steps to help your own transition into Daylight Saving Time:

  • Try to sleep more than usual a few nights prior to and immediately following the time change.
  • Take a nap in the middle of the afternoon on Sunday if you need it, but not within a few hours of your regular bedtime. Napping too close to bedtime can disrupt nighttime sleep.

Daylight Saving Time marks the end of National Sleep Awareness Week, when NSF and its partners in communities across the country raise awareness about the importance of sleep and the treatment of sleep disorders. The BAMC Sleep Disorders Center is among those partners working with NSF throughout the year. “Let Sleep Work For You” is the theme for the Week this year, a theme NSF urges Americans to adopt with healthy sleep habits all year long. Learn what you can do to improve your sleep and how to recognize signs of potentially serious sleep disorders by visiting NSF’s web site, www.sleepfoundation.org.

The BAMC Sleep DisordersCenter works under the direction of a board certified otolaryngologist and board registered sleep technologists to diagnose sleep disorders including sleep apnea, difficulties staying awake or adhering to a consistent sleep/wake cycle, snoring, sleep walking and other problems that interfere with sleep. For more information call (715) 735-8070.

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