- Janelles husband is a sleep talker. The 30-year-old teacher says her partner and bedmate, Christopher, regularly wakes her in the middle of the night, speaking in full sentences -- Tell Brian I need that paperwork tomorrow. (Huffington Post)
- Sleep problems in early childhood can be easily missed or recognized by parents and doctors. A short and flexible screening tool (like a questionnaire) may help the process of recognizing these children do that corrective measures can be instituted. (Problems, Prevalence and Persistence in First Three Years of Life - Med India)
- "Fatigue in the aviation industry has been on the NTSB's Top 10 Most-Wanted list for two decades," Mark Rosekind told a Heli-Expo audience on Saturday morning. "It still makes up six of our top 10 fears today." Rosekind, a Ph.D. (Aviation International News)
- There are two types of insomnia: primary and secondary. A person with primary insomnia has sleep problems not directly associated with any other health condition. Secondary insomnia means the sleep problems are associated with some other health condition. (My West Texas)
- And she said acoustic energy causes chronic sleep disturbances in people who live within a mile of turbines, which can lead to health problems, and the strobe effect of the shadow flicker disorients people. (South Coast Today)
- An ex-girlfriend of mine used to suffer terribly, and her continual problems with getting to sleep made me vividly aware of the process of nodding off - something which, up until that point, Id never thought about. It just happened automatically. (Independent Online)
- an expert in childhood sleep problems at the University of Chicago. That has never been done. (Calgary Herald)
- Lead author, Carole L. Marcus Children with obstructive sleep apnea who receive an effective treatment not only experience deeper shuteye but also show less attention and behavior problems. (Presstv)
- A study from the University of Helsinki was published in the International Journal of Obesity and found that middle-aged women who suffer from sleep disorders are more likely to have weight problems than women who get eight hours of nightly sleep. (Examiner)
- Difficulty falling or staying asleep, as well as sleeping too much, could heighten cardiometabolic risk. (MedPage Today)
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
Sleep problems
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