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Olympic Swimmer Simone Manuel Brings Attention to Black Women and 'Burnout' Epidemic

Olympic Swimmer Simone Manuel Brings Attention to Black Women and 'Burnout' Epidemic
blackenterprise.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from blackenterprise.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

National-institutes-of-health , Maryland , United-states , Japan , Tokyo , United-kingdom , Washington , France , National-library-of-medicine , Towson-university , America , French

Stage IV Cancer Survivor Urges Black Women Entrepreneurs To Develop A Self Care Routine Within Their Business

Stage IV Cancer Survivor Urges Black Women Entrepreneurs To Develop A Self Care Routine Within Their Business
essence.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from essence.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

New-york , United-states , United-kingdom , Americans , American , Lindsey-walker , Tiana-clark , Associates-media-group , Street-agency , New-york-times , Fx-networks , Jackson-state-university

Little Evidence for the Long-Term Efficacy of Sleep Medication Among Women in Midlife

Little Evidence for the Long-Term Efficacy of Sleep Medication Among Women in Midlife
psychiatryadvisor.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from psychiatryadvisor.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

United-states , Study-of-women-health-across-the-nation , Health-across , ஒன்றுபட்டது-மாநிலங்களில் , படிப்பு-ஆஃப்-பெண்கள்-ஆரோக்கியம்-குறுக்கே-தி-தேசம் , ஆரோக்கியம்-குறுக்கே ,

Long-term Use of Prescription Sleep Meds Unsupported by New Data

Long-term Use of Prescription Sleep Meds Unsupported by New Data
medscape.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from medscape.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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Long-term prescription medication use may not improve disturbed sleep


Long-term prescription medication use may not improve disturbed sleep
May 17 2021
Long term use of prescription meds for insomnia doesn’t seem to improve disturbed sleep in middle-aged women, suggests research published in the online journal
BMJ Open
.
There was no difference in sleep quality or duration between those who did and didn’t take these meds for 1 to 2 years, the findings show.
Disturbed sleep--difficulty falling and/or staying asleep and waking early--is common. An estimated 9 million adults in the US alone say they take prescription meds to try and get a good night’s sleep.
Poor quality sleep is associated with ill health, including diabetes, high blood pressure, pain and depression, and various drugs are prescribed to induce shut-eye.

Study-of-women-health-across-the-nation , Health-across , Sleep , Lood , Lood-pressure , Epression , Iabetes , Rugs , Ye , Igh-blood-pressure , Nsomnia

Prescription pills don't equal better sleep in the long run for women, study suggests


Prescription pills don't equal better sleep in the long run for women, study suggests
By
Katie Hunt, CNN
enablePagination: false
(CNN) — Many people suffering from insomnia take medication to get a better night's sleep.
While many sleep aids work over short periods of up to six months, clinical trial data has showed, insomnia can be a chronic problem — and many people end up taking these drugs for longer.
Much less is known about the long-term benefits of these drugs, said the authors of a new study published in the journal BMJ Open.
The study's research on more than 600 women ages 42 to 52 in the United States found that those who used medication to help their insomnia over a one- to two-year period did not get a better night's sleep than those who did not take any prescription sleeping pills.

Boston , Massachusetts , United-states , Harvard-university , American , Raj-dasgupta , American-academy-of-sleep-medicine , University-of-pittsburgh , University-of-southern-california , Study-of-women-health-across-the-nation , Cnn , Health-across

Prescription sleep pills not likely to help women in the long run, study finds


Prescription sleep pills not likely to help women in the long run, study finds
TODAY
4 hrs ago
Linda Carroll
Prescription sleep medications can help women struggling with occasional insomnia but probably won't help with chronic sleep problems, new research finds.
Two years of data from nearly 700 middle-age women showed that long-term use of medications such as Ambien, Lunestra or some anti-anxiety prescriptions didn't help women sleep better in the long run compared to women who didn't use prescription pills, according to the report published Tuesday in BMJ Open.
"Long-term use of medications for sleep is not associated with reductions in sleep problems," said the study's lead author, Dr. Daniel Solomon, a professor of medicine in rheumatology and pharmacoepidemiology at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. "We looked at women who had a similar baseline description of their sleep disturbances and compared those who were still taking the medications after two years to women who had not ever taken them, and we found no difference in sleep outcomes."

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Long term use of prescription meds for insomnia not linked to better quality sleep


No difference between those who did and didn’t take these drugs for 1-2 years
Long term use of prescription meds for insomnia doesn’t seem to improve disturbed sleep in middle-aged women, suggests research published in the online journal BMJ Open.
There was no difference in sleep quality or duration between those who did and didn’t take these meds for 1 to 2 years, the findings show.
Disturbed sleep–difficulty falling and/or staying asleep and waking early–is common. An estimated 9 million adults in the US alone say they take prescription meds to try and get a good night’s sleep.

Study-of-women-health-across-the-nation , Health-across , Bmj , Ealth , Omen , Leep-disturbance , Enzodiazepines , Linical-trial , Leep-disorder , Iological , Epression

Prescription pills don't equal better sleep in the long run for women, study suggests


WKBT
May 12, 2021 10:58 AM
By Katie Hunt, CNN
Posted:
Updated:
Many people suffering from insomnia take medication to get a better night’s sleep.
While many sleep aids work over short periods of up to six months, clinical trial data has showed, insomnia can be a chronic problem — and many people end up taking these drugs for longer.
The study’s research on more than 600 women ages 42 to 52 in the United States found that those who used medication to help their insomnia over a one- to two-year period did not get a better night’s sleep than those who did not take any prescription sleeping pills.

Boston , Massachusetts , United-states , Harvard-university , American , Raj-dasgupta , American-academy-of-sleep-medicine , University-of-pittsburgh , University-of-southern-california , Study-of-women-health-across-the-nation , Cnn , Katie-hunt

Prescription pills don't mean better sleep in the long run for women, study suggests


Prescription pills don't mean better sleep in the long run for women, study suggests
CNN
5/12/2021
Many people suffering from insomnia take medication to get a better night's sleep.
While many sleep aids work over short periods of up to six months, clinical trial data has showed, insomnia can be a chronic problem -- and many people end up taking these drugs for longer.
The study's research on more than 600 women ages 42 to 52 in the United States found that those who used medication to help their insomnia over a one- to two-year period did not get a better night's sleep than those who did not take any prescription sleeping pills.

Boston , Massachusetts , United-states , Harvard-university , American , Raj-dasgupta , American-academy-of-sleep-medicine , University-of-pittsburgh , University-of-southern-california , Study-of-women-health-across-the-nation , Health-across , Southern-california