Children and Insomnia
Children of all ages can experience insomnia too; it is not
just partial to adults. Often when children experience insomnia
it can be for some of the very same reasons that adults
experience it, a change in schedule as maybe they are going
back to school after summer vacation, too much sugar or
caffeine, family or school related stress, or a lack of
routine. A lack of routine is a result of parents not
establishing a regular routine and defining a specific
bedtime.
While insomnia is not a disease but a condition it can have
a detrimental effect on children as they are tired and grumpy
during the day, often hard for teachers to manage, and this can
lead to behavior problems too. If this is something that
happens every night then it could be the temperament of the
child could be the primary reason. If children know that they
can get away with it, they will fight sleep for hours to prove
a point.
However, if your child has insomnia that is accompanied with
nervousness, irritability, intensity, high strung, excitable,
and easily angered then it might be that your child has
Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD). There is a
direct relationship between ADHD and insomnia in children.
Monitor your child and see if they are extremely difficult to
wake in the morning and it is nearly impossible to turn off
their motor at night as this too is associated with ADHD.
Children who have insomnia may actually display signs that
are very similar to that of ADHD because they are lacking sleep
and their systems are out of whack. Children are really
supposed to get 9-11 hours of sleep per night, although studies
have displayed that is rarely the case. Parents need to
remember that children who are exhausted can actually still
appear to have so much energy but what that really is, is their
body's way of dealing with the tiredness. In the meantime they
will become ornery and misbehaved but it is how they are coping
with their lack of sleep and you certainly can not expect a
good performance academically either.
Some facts about children and sleep are that sleep in one of
the most important factors in a child's development because
while a child is sleeping is when he body produces more of the
hormones that cause children to grow. Children between the ages
of one and five require 10-12 hours of sleep per night and
school age children require about 10 hours of sleep per
night.
So if you have a child that has a difficult time either
falling asleep or staying asleep then here are some handy tips
to start off with, do not turn on any lights and speak to the
child in a very soft voice, and never let a child sleep in bed
with you because in no time it will become a repetitive habit.
Later that will complicate any insomnia that your child may
suffer from so it is important to keep a routine.
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