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Sleep hygiene for busy families: small changes that help

Bedtime routines, screens, and when to seek medical advice for insomnia.

Trita Wellness Team

Trita Wellness Team

Wellness & Patient Education

November 12, 20248 min read
Health education article

Why sleep is medical, not lazy

Short sleep and fragmented sleep are linked to weight gain, higher blood pressure, mood changes, and weaker immune responses. For children, sleep supports growth and learning. Improving habits is first-line before medications for many adults with mild insomnia.

Consistency beats perfection

A stable wake time anchors your body clock—even on weekends, keep wake times within about an hour. Pair with a wind-down routine: dim lights, quiet activities, and a cool, dark bedroom.

Screens and caffeine

Blue light and stimulating content delay melatonin onset. Aim to stop phones/tablets 60–90 minutes before bed when possible. Cut caffeine after early afternoon; watch hidden sources like energy drinks.

Kids and teens

Predictable bedtime sequences (bath, book, bed) reduce conflict. Adolescents have biologically delayed clocks—protect morning light and avoid all-nighters before exams.

When to see a clinician

Snoring with daytime sleepiness may suggest sleep apnea. Restless legs, chronic pain, depression, or anxiety can masquerade as “insomnia.” The CDC sleep portal offers general education; your family doctor personalizes evaluation.

Small steps

Pick one change for two weeks—earlier wake time, caffeine limit, or screen curfew—then reassess.

Trita Wellness Team

Written by Trita Wellness Team

Wellness & Patient Education

The Trita Wellness team is dedicated to patient education and community health outreach. We create resources to help Ottawa residents make informed decisions about their health and navigate the Canadian healthcare system.

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