Live Longer Better
  • Your journey
    • More About the Optimal Ageing Programme >
      • About Muir Gray
      • Muir Gray's publications
    • Coping with Lockdown
    • Using the right words right; ageing, fitness, disease and beliefs >
      • Bad language about older people
    • The Lockdown Wellbeing Programme >
      • The Daily Mail series
    • the Daily Dozen + 30 for 4S fitness
    • What is happening as we live longer >
      • Your monthly briefing
    • LLL for LLB
    • The environment is tough >
      • Retirement has benefits and risks >
        • Join the Challenge Hub
      • Some people got a better start than others
      • the impact of isolation is now recognised
      • The physical environment is the cause of many problems blamed on ageing
      • Poverty affects too many older people
    • the Living Longer Better Programme >
      • what would a good life in your late 80s be likel
      • What do you fear most and want to avoid
      • Start to write your Living Longer Better Plan
      • Think positive
    • How to reduce your risk of a bad death
    • My diary & daily routine
    • My health record
    • My housing
    • Othercare - Supporting someone else
    • About the OxAP >
      • Muir Gray's Bookshop >
        • The Antidote To Ageing
        • Midlife
        • Sod60!
        • Sod70!
        • Get Moving
        • Eatwell!
        • Dr Gray's Walking Cure
      • Here is the news
  • Get physically better
    • Increase strength, stamina, suppleness and skill >
      • Strength
      • Stamina
      • Skill
      • Suppleness
      • Work hard
      • Brisk walking >
        • Virtual Walking
        • Restart Sport >
          • Restart swimming
          • Restart tennis
          • Restart football
          • Restart cycling
          • Virtual Cycling
      • If you have difficulty walking briskly
      • Join a Gym or Wellness Hub >
        • Meet others for fitness >
          • Silver sneakers
          • Age UK Generation games
          • Join a Gym, Fitness Centre or Wellness Hub
          • Find a personal trainer
      • Find a Trainer
    • Reduce your risk of disease >
      • Eat Well
      • Stop smoking
      • Increase activity - physical, cognitive and emotional
      • Watch the alcohol
      • Accept the offers from the NHS screening programmes
      • We need a revolution
    • Look after your body >
      • Happy and Positive Birthday >
        • Sod 60!
        • Sod70!
        • Sod It! Eat Well
        • Sod Sittin, Get Moving!
      • Skin maintenance
      • Teeth and gum maintenance
      • Feet maintenance
      • Bone, joint and muscle maintenance
      • Bowel maintenance
      • Brain maintenance
      • Mind maintenance
      • Heart maintenance
      • Lung maintenance
      • Waterworks maintenance for men
      • Waterworks maintenance for women
      • See as clearly as possible
      • Keep your Hearing as acute as possible
    • If disease occurs - Optimise Your Healthcare >
      • Living with a common condition >
        • Arthritis
        • Cancer
        • COPD _ Bronchitis
        • Diabetes
        • Dementia
        • Heart disease
        • Parkinson's Disease
        • Stroke
      • Making a big decision >
        • Should i have a hip replacement ?
      • Consequences of common conditions >
        • Loss of status
        • Disability and handicap
        • Isolation
        • Depression
        • Frailty
      • Look out for social as well as drug prescribing >
        • Enjoy Activity Therapy
      • What you can do to help the NHS even more
  • Think better
    • Train your brain ; we now know the brain can get fitter at any age
    • Understanding Dementia & Alzheimer's Disease
    • Reduce your risk of dementia >
      • Stimulate your brain more every year >
        • Learning new skills and build on your assets
        • Get even more engaged
      • Protect your brain >
        • Sleep better
        • Get more active
        • Avoid over medication
        • Control stress levels
        • Air pollution and dementia
      • Keep the oxygen flowing
    • Combat depression
  • Feel better
    • Stay engaged and don't lose your sense of purpose
    • Feel even better by helping other people even more
    • Meet others like you
    • Optimise the Internet >
      • My Virtual Reality
    • Join others for a Daily Service
    • Feel better by visiting Great Places >
      • Visit the great Museums
      • Visit the great libraries
      • Visit a National Trust treasure
    • Feel better through music >
      • Join a concert party
      • Your virtual choir
      • Music for Moving
    • Feel better by reading, listening and watching with other people >
      • Kindling Book Club >
        • Crime
        • Classics
        • Health
      • Audible Book Club
      • Your BBC
      • Your Film Club
    • Feel better by learning new skills and ideas
    • Feel better by joining a club to play games and meet others >
      • Chess Club
      • Bingo club
      • Bridge Club
    • Feel better by supporting nature >
      • Visit the great gardens
    • Feeling Better by Going Down Memory Lane >
      • Sporting memories are powerful
  • Understand better
    • Ageing is a normal biological process
    • From 40 to 90 loss of fitness is serious
    • The effects of disease are often compounded by loss of fitness
    • Negative beliefs and attitudes have a huge impact
    • The importance of planning with purpose
    • The Ageing Brain and the Maturing Mind
    • Strength and Power can always be increased
    • Skill and co-ordination can be improved at any age
    • Stamina can be improved by brisk walking
    • Suppleness can always be improved and stiffness always reduced
    • Activity Therapy is of vital importance

Sleep better

SLEEP BETTER 

Adequate sleep is important for continued everyday good health. Too little sleep, (less than six hours), of sleep, or too much more than nine hours, of sleep is associated with reductions in cognitive ability.  Ways to prevent or control insomnia include: getting regular exercise, avoiding high calorie snacks, sugar, large amounts of caffeine, and extreme levels of activity late in the evening before going to bed. Methods that help to gain a restful sleep include: having a quiet, cooler bedroom with little or no light. Sometimes a warm bath aids in having a restful sleep. 
Sleep disordered breathing (apnea) may impair cognitive ability in older adults. What is called a continuous positive airway pressure device is the treatment for this disorder.  This device has the potential to improve cognitive ability at least in the short term as well as reducing risk for cardiovascular disease, an important cause of dementia.

​How can risk from lack of sleep be reduced?
Population and intervention studies suggest that insomnia may impair intellectual ability in older adults and their treatments such as computer cognitive training have the potential to reduce this effect. The long-term effects, however, of these interventions are unknown. The current evidence-based treatments for sleep disordered breathing are non-drug approaches, such as weight reduction and the use of a continuous positive airway pressure device.
Sleep medication should only be used as a short-term treatment for insomnia.  The dangers of taking sleep medication for prolonged periods of time include: possible side-effects, addiction to the medication, contraindications with other medications and the fact that sleep medications interfere with all five stages of sleep, particularly REM sleep.  
Before deciding to take sleep medication, the following alternative methods could be considered. Assess the room for sleeping to determine if it is conducive to having a good night’s sleep. Eliminate computers or televisions in the bedroom.  Block additional lighting from street lights or an alarm clock. Reduce noise levels or operate a fan to disguise any background noise. Some people use devices that create sounds of rushing water to help fall asleep. This is called “white noise”. 
Physical activity during the day helps to ensure a good night’s sleep.  A few hours of daylight exposure is necessary to preserve melatonin to ensure a good night’s sleep. Napping during the day should be avoided.  Sleep can be improved sleep if the bedroom is cooler (less than 18 C degrees) rather than hotter (more than 20 C degrees). As sleep is important for better health, like other health improving activities, a routine for sleep should be established. A standard time to go to sleep and a standard time to wake up should be followed. Seven hours of sleep each night should be the goal. Avoid having a light snack, sugar, caffeine, alcohol, nicotine, stimulation from television programs, computer games and excessive exercise before going to sleep. However, vigorous exercise is desirable in the morning or late afternoon. Deep breathing before sleep helps to relax and fall asleep.
For families caring for someone living with dementia, pragmatic strategies can be used to help get a better sleep. These strategies include:  motion activated night lights, red bulb in night lights, a fan to reduce noises, television on a timer and passive body warming, such as having a bath before bed.
A warm bath or holding a warm ‘wheat bag’ for ½ hour before going to bed can help raise core body temperature. How does it work?  Just before falling asleep the body temperature rises for a short period.  As the body cools off you feel sleepy. That is why a warm bath before bed can act as an aid in falling asleep.   So as the warm bath raises the body temperature for a short time, the cooling off after the bath can aid in falling asleep.
Am I on the right track with my sleep?
In order to ‘invest’ in future good-quality hearing, start in mid-life with, exercise, maintaining social engagement, reduce or stop smoking, and manage your hearing depression, diabetes, hypertension and obesity.
 
The following checklist can be used in checking that you are advancing your efforts to have good-quality sleep: 
  1. I am getting seven or more hours of sleep each night and not sleeping more than nine hours
  1. I do not wake up during the night more than once
  2. I am able to go to sleep most nights
  3. I do not sleep during the day

HOW COULD YOU USE THIS KNOWLEDGE TO ACHIEVE YOUR OWN OBJECTIVES ?

  • Keep a sleep diary for a week, just the number of hours and how often you wake in the night is sufficient 
  • /If you are not getting seven hours a night look at the NHS Choices sleep improvement programme and put the advice into actionNB men  may wake once or twice to pass water and have to accept this.  If it is a problem they should try to manage it by controlling fluid intake after 6pm rather than seeking medical help in the first instance because of the risks of prostate surgery
HOW COULD YOU USE THIS KNOWLEDGE IF YOU ARE SUPPORTING SOMEONE ELSE?

  • Make sure they see this as a problem as well as you
  • Discuss the NHS Choices Sleep improvement programme with them 
 ​

Proudly powered by Weebly