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Sleep and Your Family
By SAMHSA

Are you tired of feeling tired? If so, you're not alone. Many Americans don't get enough sleep. But you may not know just how much sleep - or the lack of sleep - affects you and your family.

Sleep is a natural part of life, but many people know very little about how important it is and some even try to get by with little sleep. Sleep is something our bodies need to do; it is not an option. Even though the exact reasons for sleep remain a mystery, we know that during sleep many of the body's major organ and regulatory systems continue to work actively. Some parts of the brain actually increase their activity dramatically, and the body produces more of certain hormones. Sleep, like diet and exercise, is important for our minds and bodies to function normally.

Problem Sleepiness Has Serious Consequences

Sleepiness due to chronic lack of adequate sleep is a big problem in the United States and affects many children as well as adults. Children and even adolescents need at least 9 hours of sleep each night to do their best. Most adults need about 8 hours of sleep each night.

When we get less sleep than we need each night, even by 1 hour, we develop a "sleep debt." If the sleep debt becomes too great, it can lead to problem sleepiness - sleepiness that occurs when you should be awake and alert, interferes with daily routine and activities, and reduces your ability to function. Even if you do not feel sleepy, the sleep debt can have a powerful negative effect on your daytime performance, thinking, and mood and can cause you to be drowsy or fall asleep at inappropriate and even dangerous times.

Problem sleepiness has serious consequences. It puts adolescents and adults at risk for driving or workplace accidents. In children, it increases the risk of accidents and injuries. In addition, lack of sleep can have a negative effect on children's performance in school, on the playground, in extracurricular activities, and in social relationships.

Inadequate sleep can cause decreases in:

  • Performance
  • Concentration
  • Reaction times
  • Consolidation of information learning

Inadequate sleep can cause increases in:

  • Memory lapses
  • Accidents and injuries
  • Behavior problems
  • Mood problems

About the Author

www.samhsa.gov
SAMHSA works to improve the quality and availability of substance abuse prevention, alcohol and drug addiction treatment, and mental health services. Includes links to support groups, information resources, events and articles.


Articles & Books
Sleep : Part 1 - The Young Mother: Management of Children in Regard to Health
Not a few persons consider all rules relative to sleep as utterly futile. They regard it as so much of a natural or animal process, that if we are let alone we shall seldom err, at any age, respecting it. Rules on the subject, above all
Suggestions about Sleep : Part 1 - Vitality Supreme
Sleep is one of the first essentials in maintaining or in building vitality. There are differences of opinion as to how much sleep may be necessary to health, but that sufficient sleep is required if one wishes to maintain the maximum of energy no one can
Early Rising : Part 1 - American Woman's Home
There is no practice which has been more extensively eulogized in all ages than early rising; and this universal impression is an indication that it is founded on true philosophy. For it is rarely the case that the common sense of mankind fastens

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