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Doctors Rarely Note Sleep Problems
of Elderly
More than two-thirds of older
patients report sleep problems, but doctors rarely note these
complaints in the patients' charts, a Northwestern University study
finds.
The study, published in a recent
issue of the American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, included
1,503 patients aged 60 and older who visited their primary-care
doctors. After the visits, social workers surveyed the patients
about sleep problems.
The social workers learned that 69
percent of the patients had at least one sleep complaint, and 40
percent had two or more. Forty-five percent of the patients said
they had "difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or being able
to sleep."
Despite the high rate of sleep
complaints among the patients, a sleep complaint was only reported
by the doctor in the patient's chart 19 percent of the time, even
when the patient indicated sleep problems in all five sleep
questions on the survey.
This is important, since previous
research has linked sleep disorders in the elderly to poorer mental
and physical health and quality of life.
"A doctor may not think that it's
very important to ask the patient about sleep. We (the researchers)
hypothesize that doctors think that sleep problems are a normal part
of aging, and there's not much they can do about it," study author
Kathryn Reid, a research assistant professor of neurology at
Northwestern's Feinberg School of Medicine, said in a prepared
statement.
But while some sleep problems --
including a reduction in deep sleep -- tend to occur with age, sleep
disturbances are not an inevitable part of aging. In fact, a recent
study found that among older people with exceptionally good health,
only 1 percent had sleep difficulties.
"Now, a lot of studies show that
not getting enough sleep can lower your metabolic function; be
associated with cardiovascular problems, cancer and breast cancer in
women; and increase our mortality. Sleep deprivation also increases
your sensitivity to pain," Reid said.
Treatment options for sleep
disorders may include meditation, exercise and bright light or
evening activity. -- HealthDay News
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