If you’re having trouble sleeping, listening to music can be a safe, effective, and easy way to help you fall and stay asleep. Not just you, this trick can also help your elderly parents.
You see, a study published in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society has found that listening to music can help older adults sleep better.
Researchers from the National Cheng Kung University Hospital in Taiwan combined the results of past studies to understand the effect that listening to music can have on the quality of older adults’ sleep.
As we age, our sleep cycles change and make a good night’s sleep harder to achieve. What does it really mean to get a good night’s sleep? If you wake up rested and ready to start your day, you probably slept deeply the night before.
But if you’re tired during the day, need coffee to keep you going, or wake up several times during the night, you may not be getting the deep sleep you need.
According to the American National Institute on Aging, older adults need seven to nine hours of sleep each night.
But studies have shown that 40 to 70% of older adults have sleep problems and over 40% have insomnia, meaning they wake up often during the night or too early in the morning. Sleep problems can make you feel irritable and depressed, can cause memory problems, and can even lead to falls or accidents.
For their study, the researchers searched for past studies that tested the effect of listening to music on older adults with sleep problems who live at home. They looked at five studies with 288 participants. Half of these people listened to music; the other half got the usual or no treatment for their sleep problems.
People who were treated with music listened to either calming or rhythmic music for 30 minutes to one hour, over a period ranging from two days to three months. (Calming music has slow tempo of 60 to 80 beats per minute and a smooth melody, while rhythmic music is faster and louder.)
All participants answered questions about how well they thought they were sleeping. Each participant ended up with a score between 0 and 21 for the quality of their sleep.
The researchers looked at the difference in average scores for:
Listening to calming music at bedtime improved sleep quality in older adults, and calming music was much better at improving sleep quality than rhythmic music.
The researchers said that calming music may improve sleep by slowing your heart rate and breathing and lowering your blood pressure. This, in turn helps lower your levels of stress and anxiety.
Researchers also learned that listening to music for longer than four weeks is better at improving sleep quality than listening to music for a shorter length of time.
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