A R T I C L E |
D A T E |
| Blood Pressure 101 | 02-24-2010 |
| Aphasia: Finding the Words |
10-01-2008 |
| The Way We Were How to be a caregiver and still be a couple after a stroke |
04-09-2008 |
| Home Coming Guide to stroke survivor home care |
04-02-2008 |
| Understanding Sudden Death in Teen Athletes | 10-04-2006 |
| The Power of Words | 03-30-2006 |
| Home is Where the Heart (defibrillator) Lives... Experts weigh in on home external heart defibrillators |
02-13-2006 |
| Lower, Lower, Lower Stricter Guidelines for Cholesterol |
08-11-2005 |
| Awakenings: The most dangerous time of the day...is the start of it. |
11-11-2004 |
| Do the Math: The New Cholesterol Numbers |
08-23-2004 |
| Guess Who Has High Blood Pressure? Our Children |
08-05-2004 |
| Erectile
Dysfunction A distress signal from a whole ‘nuther part of the body |
07-12-2004 |
| Can Migraine Really Cause Stroke? The Debate Begins |
04-12-2004 |
| High Blood Pressure And West Nile Virus What You Need to Know |
04-05-2004 |
| Pumped Up Stroke patients gain mobility, calm spasms with new device |
01-15-2004 |
| T.I.A. (mini-strokes): The Wake-Up Call for Your Brain |
07-24-2003 |
| Constraint Leads to Freedom Increasing Mobility for Stroke Patients |
05-19-2003 |
| The Flu Shot: Hidden Heart Protector |
05-12-2003 |
What a Difference
60 Minutes Can Make
It’s just an hour. At 2 a.m. on March 14, time changes as we “spring forward” one hour overnight. It wouldn’t seem to be that big of a deal, but it is according to researchers at the University of Michigan’s Center for Sleep Science. They have found that in the days immediately following the spring time change each year more people have serious car accidents, most likely due to the sleep loss and adjustments that our biological clocks must make to the new schedule.
To prepare for the time change, start going to bed and waking up 15 minutes earlier each day between now and the start of Daylight Savings Time. This helps reset your biological clock.
The spring time change isn’t the only time we should be concerned about our levels of sleep. According to the sleep researchers, adults ought to get 8 to 8.5 hours of sleep every night, but few of us do. This does more than leave us groggy in the mornings. Findings have shown that a lack of sleep may increase risks of obesity, diabetes, stroke and heart attacks.
The National Sleep Foundation offers this advice for healthy sleep: