Archive for the ‘Sleep Disorders’ Category

Are bad sleeping habits driving us mad?

An excellent article summarizing a number of links between sleep disturbances and mental illness, but it lacks a lot of details about the sleep breathing connections.

Sleeping on the Job

Let’s see, why do people fall asleep when they’re supposed to be working? Hmmm, I wonder.

Washington Post is at it again: More disdainful comments about sleep

The author’s article suffers from a specific and very serious flaw with respect to her disdainful comments about sleep.

The flaw shows up in two related ways. First, she only discusses sleep in the context of “quantity,” based on the so-called need for more hours of sleep. But that model itself is flawed, because what people really need is greater “quality” in their sleep, because “sleep quality drives sleep quantity.”

The second flaw derives from the first. By focusing on sleep quantity, she avoids the most important advances in the field of sleep medicine–advances that have already saved lives and dramatically increased quality of life.

For example, she reports on the connection that sleeping more hours might prevent car accidents, and as a sleep specialist I concur that it might. But, a much more powerful way to prevent accidents would be to find out why the individual is sleeping less than they supposedly should be sleeping.

The answer to this question, more than 70% of the time is that the person suffers from undiagnosed and untreated sleep apnea. The author may believe she is not dissuading someone from doing something about their sleep deprivation. But, the tone of the article dismisses a lack of sleep as another thing we needn’t worry about.

In fact, a lack of sleep is an excellent marker for people suffering marked sleep fragmentation caused by physical sleep disorders such as sleep apnea.

Thus, a very useful and cost-effective approach to healthcare in the case of sleep disturbance strongly supports a proactive stance to diagnose sleep disorders early to avoid not just accidents but also to reduce morbidity associated with strokes, depression, diabetes, heart disease and daytime fatigue and sleepiness.

To do so requires going well beyond the superficialities embedded within this author’s commentary.

Furthermore, as I propose on my site, “aggressive treatment of a sleep disorder is one of the cheapest health insurance policies you can buy!”

This author’s misleading commentary about sleep will steer people in the wrong direction and lead to greater health care costs and worse outcomes.

Maybe after a good night’s sleep, she’ll reconsider!

Pillow Talk at the Washington Post

Here’s a comment I wrote to Robin Wright in a Washington Post article on pillows:

Pillows can also improve sleep to some extent, and for some with mild sleep breathing problems, there are “neck extension” pillows that may actually reduce some of the breathing events.

However, the big problem with “pillow talk” as well as “mattress talk” is that the discussion always creates assumptions that large changes in your sleep will occur if you just find the right mattress or pillow. No doubt, there is some truth in this perspective but not nearly as much as the bedding manufacturers would like you to believe.

The real facts are that when a person suffers from a physical sleep disorder, pillows and mattresses should almost never be considered primary treatment options, yet many people and their physicians actually think about pillows and mattresses long before they even consider the notion of visiting with a sleep specialist, a medical doctor with specific training, expertise and board-certification in the field of sleep medicine.

I cannot count the number of people who I have met in my career in sleep medicine who had obvious sleep disorders by my assessment, yet they chose to go shopping at sleep centers (aka mattress stores) with the firm belief that a mattress was a viable treatment option.

Unfortunately, many in the media foster these misguided approaches to sleep medical care by writing articles about pillows or mattresses instead of writing articles about pillows, mattressess and sleep disorders.

Barry Krakow MD

Dr. Barry Krakow
Dr. Barry KrakowSee Dr. Krakow's videos at sleeptreatment.com with the latest news and personal testimonials about his book.
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