How do health conditions affect sleep?
Here, older people talk about how their health or health conditions affect their sleep. They talk about why sleep is important for your health and...
We talked to older people (aged 65+) about their experiences of sleep when bereaved or while caring for a loved one. Caring could be for a relative they live with, or who lives elsewhere. Some were professional carers. In all cases, their caring roles could affect their sleep. Sleep continues to be affected when a loved one has died, and for some time afterwards.
Many people we spoke to had been bereaved by the death of someone close to them. Sometimes this was a sudden bereavement and could impact on sleep. People said they had great difficulty getting to sleep, as well as waking up a lot in the night with flashbacks of what had happened.
Some people went to the doctor or chemist to get sleeping tablets. Others dealt with it as best they could without medication and hoped that their sleep would eventually return to normal.
In some instances, people had been a carer for the person who had died, and this was particularly distressing for them. Being a carer may have meant being up a lot in the night for various reasons. People felt physically tired from being a carer but it was also emotionally and mentally tiring to have someone close to them so ill.
Since her husband’s stroke five years ago, Anne’s sleep has been disturbed because she prefers to sleep in the same bed as her husband so that she can keep an eye on him during the night.
For some people, patterns of sleep that changed while they were a carer carried on long after their loved one had died. Robert slept very lightly as he had to be constantly aware of his partner’s needs. This continued after she died. Many people tried different ways to improve their sleep.
Being responsible for looking after a close family member all the time is tiring and stressful. Judy told us how she felt guilty when she could no longer continue to look after her brother who had dementia. The guilty feelings stayed with her when he was moved into a home and she continued to sleep badly.
People found there could be an impact on their sleep from loved ones with care needs who weren’t living in the same house. Their family member could be living elsewhere but in constant contact, even in the middle of the night. Peter explained how he and his wife had a stressful period in their life when both his mother-law and father-law were ill. They had to travel long distances on a regular basis to see them both until they died, and the strain of this affected their sleep.
Several people talked about the difficulty of caring for elderly parents or relatives, and how this affected their sleep, usually at a time when they had other concerns and worries such as their own health and their own children’s problems
Several people we spoke to had jobs which involved them caring for others, such as working in care homes, running a care company or being a social worker. They often talked of continuing that caring role at night. People who spent their working lives caring for others said it was very difficult to switch off from caring at night. They often had trouble sleeping because they were still worried about the people they felt they were responsible for.
But caring didn’t only take the form of looking after someone who was unwell. Daphne’s daughter had temporarily moved back home. She had started getting up earlier than she would have liked to help her daughter get to work on time. She also noticed that she tended to go to bed later as well. She found that she was caring for her daughter’s needs and changing her sleep patterns to help with that.
Here, older people talk about how their health or health conditions affect their sleep. They talk about why sleep is important for your health and...
Several people we talked to who were aged over 65 were still working part-time. Some had retired from their main career then started another different...