Getting Your Child To Sleep
Whatever the base cause, lack of sleep is one of the most debilitating
conditions outside of serious illness or disease. Not getting sufficient
sleep or high quality sleep is like the peeble in a pond. The effect
of ones life ripples out in waves, causing problems with work, relationships
and overall health.
A common cause of lack of sleep is having a child with sleeping
disorders.
When the sleep deprived is a child, the treatment can be somewhat
more complicated. The article below provides some understanding
and guidelines as to establishing healthy sleep patterns in your
child.
Establishing Healthy Sleep Patterns
by J. Foley
There is a great way for you to influence your child's intelligence
to help him excel later in life. Teach him healthy sleep patterns
while he is a baby. This is one of the best ways to influence your
child's intelligence.
The author of Healthy Sleep Habits, Happy Child, Dr. Marc Weissbluth,
uses the research of Dr. Lewis M. Terman in his study. Although
Dr. Terman's research was completed in 1925, it is still widely
quoted and used today. Dr. Terman used the Stanford-Binet Intelligence
Test to test over 3,000 children. In the children who were found
to have superior intelligence there was one thing in common. They
all had healthy sleep patterns at night.
Tiredness can cause your child to experience colic-like symptoms,
crankiness, irritability, fussiness, hypertension, and poor focusing
and eating habits. Some studies even suggest that there is a link
between fatigue and the increasing diagnosis rate of ADHD.
Now that we understand how important it is to establish good sleep
patterns, we will learn about some things that may hinder your child
learning good patterns.
- Using nursing as a way to get your child to sleep is not a good
idea. This causes your child to have a dependence upon nursing
to get to sleep and they do not learn how to fall asleep on their
own.
- Rocking your baby to sleep is setting yourself up for problems
down the road. Using a rocking chair used to be the norm, but
now many parents will put a baby's bouncy seat on the dryer or
take them for a ride in the car to help them fall asleep. These
methods work, but as soon as your baby wakes up you will have
to do it all over again. Your baby does not learn how to fall
asleep on its own.
- Putting your child in bed with you puts them at a risk physically
and mentally. Sharing your bed may increase the risk of SIDS and
your child could develop a sleep disorder. A research study at
the University of Massachusetts Medical School says that there
is a link between co-sleeping and children who have sleep disorders.
What do you do to help your child learn to fall asleep? You first
need to put your baby to bed while they are still awake. In this
way, he can learn to self-soothe and he will fall asleep on his
own. Feed him, rock him, and cuddle on him before your put him to
bed. You will be glad you did!
Article Written By J. Foley http://travelguy.typepad.com/your_baby
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