Sleep Centers for Teenagers Brockport NY

This page provides useful content and local businesses that can help with your search for Sleep Centers for Teenagers. You will find helpful, informative articles about Sleep Centers for Teenagers, including "Help Your Teen Sleep Right". You will also find local businesses that provide the products or services that you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Brockport, NY that will answer all of your questions about Sleep Centers for Teenagers.

Sleep Insights
(585) 385-6070
2300 Buffalo Road
Rochester, NY
Strong Sleep Disorders Center University of Rochester
(585) 341-7575
2337 S. Clinton Avenue
Rochester, NY
The Sleep Center at Westchester Medical Center Westchester Medical Center
(914) 493-1105
95 Grasslands Road
Valhalla, NY
Buffalo Sleep Medicine Center
(716) 887-5337
3 Gates Circle
Buffalo, NY
Middletown Medical Sleep Center
(845) 344-3981
111 Maltese Drive
Middletown, NY
Unity Sleep Disorders Center Unity Health System
(585) 442-4141
919 Westfall Road
Rochester, NY
The Center for Sleep Medicine at St. Joseph Hospital
(516) 520-2521
4295 Hempstead Turnpike
Bethpage, NY
New York Sleep Wake Institute
(646) 778-3477
275 Seventh Avenue 2nd Floor
New York, NY
Columbia University Cardiopulmonary Sleep and Ventilatory Disorders Center
(212) 305-7591
622 W. 168th Street
New York, NY
The Sleep Center Community General Hospital
(315) 492-5877
4900 Broad Road
Syracuse, NY

Help Your Teen Sleep Right

Knowing what good sleep entails is important. Sleep deprivation can contribute to teen depression.

Help your teen develop good sleep habits with these recommendations:

  1. Help your teen make sleep a priority. Encourage him to focus on establishing healthy sleep patterns by keeping consistent sleeping and waking times.
  2. Keep bedroom distractions to a minimum. Remove any computers or television sets..
  3. Help her wind down with quiet time before bed. Reading or showering can help teens relax. Watching television or catching up with friends online can be too stimulating.
  4. Eat dinner early. Big meals close to bedtime require digestive processes that can keep your teen awake.
  5. Limit caffeinated drinks and sugar close to bedtime. Sugar causes a rise in blood sugar. When it gets low again in the middle of the night it may wake your child.
  6. Reduce noise in the bedroom. Try earplugs or create "white noise" with a fan or white noise machine.
  7. Put more downtime into the schedule. Many kids have too much on their plates and the pressure is overwhelming. "More than ever our kids need time to decompress," Branov says. "Think about how stressed you'd feel if every minute of your weekday was scheduled." Branov reminds parents not to measure success by how much is accomplished. "Poor lifestyle habits and lack of balance in life can predispose anyone to depression."
  8. Use medication as a last resort. Melatonin is generally safe at low doses as a temporary sleep aid to reset one's sleep clock or under times of severe stress, for example. Sleeping pills are not FDA approved for use in children but according to Branov are sometimes prescribed under certain circumstances. "It's easy to get physically and psychologically dependent on sleeping pills, which lose their effectiveness over time as sleeping problems often get worse."

 

Sources:
Email interview with Michael Branov, MD arranged through Gail Bradney at CS Lewis Publicity ( gbradney@yahoo.com ...

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