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Health Essentials

 A health & wellness revolution starts with sleep

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Sleep is easier when the room is dark
Sleep is easier when the room is dark

 Sleep comes in different shades. There are those who sleep pretty and hardly move an inch in bed. Then we have those who are virtually at war when in bed and may turn a whole 360 degrees several times in the land of the unknown.

Woe betides you if you find your­self in the same “sleep ring” with such a fighter. The most “decorat­ed” ones bring music to sleep and the noise that exudes from their throats, nostrils and mouth could compete with any orchestra except that harmony is often thrown to the wind; those of us who belong to this category know ourselves.

Inspite of all the above, when I am hard pressed to pick one thing that has the greatest impact on one’s health, I will say SLEEP reigns.

Too many challenges spring up when we fail to get enough sleep and it’s no wonder that at the doctor’s office we hear many complaints of not being able to sleep.

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Most of the time the solution does not lie in popping pills but the Sleep Hygiene Tips below will go a long way to make a difference in your sleep and subsequently your health.

Sleep hygiene tips

1. Create darkness in the room

a. Sleep is easier when your room is dark. A bright room may be a challenge especially if you already have a bunter with sleep.

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2. Have a Regular sleep plan

a. Keep to the same time you go to bed and also time you wake up. Regularity is key.

3. Ensure room is cool and well-ventilated

a. An extremely hot or cold room may keep you awake just tossing and turning. A nice breeze makes sleep even better.

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4. Wind down or unplug about an hour to bedtime

a. Rushing throughout the day and then diving into bed may not be the best remedy for sleep. Slow down, start putting off lights, stop working and maybe spend about five minutes meditating or speaking to God.

5. Avoid phones, lap­tops, work in bed/bedroom

a. These have no busi­ness in your sleep area and should not be in your bed for sure. The glare from lights, the vibrations or sounds from messages and even calls may keep you awake and be a nightmare with your eyes wide open.

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6. Exercise

a. Exercise and laugh and you will be preparing yourself for a sound sleep. You may exercise anytime of the day but when you struggle a lot with sleep the ideal time may be four to six hours before bedtime. Exercising an hour or two before you sleep may rather keep you alert and awake.

7. Watch your food in­take; don’t overeat, avoid spicy food and lots of oil

a. Gluttony is definitely “sinful” and one of the instant pun­ishments is discomfort and difficulty sleeping. A full stomach at bedtime makes one wish for daybreak. The spices can also cause havoc especial­ly when eaten late. That heartburn will wake you up and keep you sitting and cursing all night.

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8. Watch what you drink; stimulants may affect your sleep e.g. caffeine, fizzy drinks, alcohol and energy drinks

a. If you have trouble with sleep or you do not want your sleep to be disturbed in any way, avoid these four clear hours or more before sleep time. ACOHOL deceives you into thinking you will sleep only to wake up early, feeling unrested or making dashes to the washroom.

9. Discuss with your doctor when to take some of your prescribed medication

a. Sometimes some medications we are on may cause us to wake up several times to urinate and should preferably be taken much earlier in the day. Others keep us alert over several hours.

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10. Writing your TO DO LIST for the next day relaxes the brain

a. The brain sometimes will keep “working” in an attempt not to forget what you need to do the following day. Hack your brain by writing down or typing out your To Do List for the following day and you will be blessed with good sleep.

11. Get professional care to diagnose and manage medical conditions

a. Sometimes it’s a medical condition that is directly or indirectly depriving us of good sleep and our health professional can help us find and treat this so we can once more enjoy the bliss of the Lotus Eaters. Maybe it could be a medica­tion that is just not right for you.

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Popping pills to sleep in most cases will not solve the challenge and should never be our first line of correcting our sleep wars. Adopt these hygiene tips today even if you sleep well and your health will be on the right path. Not even the decorat­ed bedroom trumpeter or the sleep fighter can take your sleep away from you.

AS ALWAYS LAUGH OFTEN, EN­SURE HYGIENE, WALK AND PRAY EVERYDAY AND REMEMBER IT’S A PRICELESS GIFT TO KNOW YOUR NUMBERS (blood sugar, blood pres­sure, blood cholesterol, BMI)

Dr. Kojo Cobba Essel

Health Essentials Ltd/ Medics Clinic

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(www.healthessentialsgh.com)

*Dr. Essel is a Medical Doctor with a keen interest in Lifestyle Med­icine, He holds an MBA and is an ISSA Specialist in Exercise Therapy, Fitness Nutrition and Corrective Exercise. He is the author of the award-winning book, ‘Unravelling The Essentials of Health & Wealth.’

Thought for the week – “ A good laugh and a long sleep are the best cures in the doctor’s book.” – Irish Proverb

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Health Essentials

Identifying the geriatric giants & taking appropriate steps

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An elderly woman suffering from headache
An elderly woman suffering from headache

This week I bumped into Deborah, one of my avid readers and I promised her I will be writing this weekend. So Deborah, this is for your reading pleasure and to pick some golden nuggets for the future.

The quest to find the best way to make one’s golden years, happy, exciting, healthy and a time most people look forward to continues unabated. One factor that keeps popping up is the need to grow friendships with people more than 20 years younger than yourself.

Do not take this for granted. It is a form of “social security” since these close friends who are much younger than you will step in to support you in more ways than you can ever imagine.

Some conditions may make life challenging for older adults but knowing these Geriatric Giants helps us to take the necessary steps to reduce our risk.

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“Geriatric Giants” refers to a group of chronic health conditions that are common in the elderly, typically 65-year-olds and older.

These conditions quite often co-occur and can impact on the independence, dignity and overall wellbeing and quality of life of an elderly person.

These Geriatric Giants include:

  1. Impaired Intellect/ Memory (e.g. Dementia)
    1. one of the major battles we need to deal with is challenges with memory
    1. Exercise, adopt the Mind Diet, build a great social network and enjoy time outdoors
    1. Keep reading and solving puzzles for as long as possible
  2. Instability – leading to much feared falls
    1. A good reason to indulge in Balance Training and Core Strengthening exercises from today
    1. Ensure your home is safe; avoid clutter such as cables crisscrossing floors, toys etc. These are all trip hazards and should be avoided
    1. Many healthy, happy and fun-loving older adults have died soon after a fall with its attendant complications.
    1. Do whatever it takes to avoid falling
  3. Immobility (opening the doors to pressure sores, joint stiffness)
    1. Even when you are unable to move about on your own it is important to get support to change positions as often as possible or get an appropriate mattress or bed that prevents prolonged pressure over any single point.
    1. Make sure you passively or actively move joints daily.
  4. Incontinence (urine, faeces or both)
    1. This is one of the reasons older adults prefer to stay at home and avoid going out to meet friends etc.
  5. Iatrogenic Disorders – adverse effect of medication
    1. Quite often most older adults are on several medications and some side effects such as drowsiness may seem to cause more unhappiness and may even lead to falls.
  6. Inappetite – this may result in poor nutrition
    1.  This may also be linked to loss of teeth thus making chewing very difficult or limited.
    1. The loss of smell and taste may also reduce the amount of food one may willingly eat.

The power to reduce the impact of the Geriatric Giants starts now and should be a lifetime commitment. It is never too early to start making the appropriate lifestyle modifications, nor is it too late to reduce the impact of the giants on one’s life.

Other conditions that significantly impact on the lives especially of the elderly are:

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  • Sleep Disorders
    • Good sleep has the power to give us energy, improve our thought pattern and even helps us to make good choices.
    • Good sleep sets the tone for a healthy life
  • Constipation
    • This is a challenge that confronts quite a number of older adults.
    • Movement, fibre and lots of water go a long way to reduce the stress that frequent constipation generates.
  • Fraility
    • Muscle loss is real and as we age, we lose a significant percentage of our muscle plus our bones also become brittle.
    • Make sure strength training is part of your exercise schedule
  • Polypharmacy
    • Another headache that needs to be confronted head-on
    • Everyone especially older adults need a good primary care physician or a general practitioner who can coordinate all medicines from the different Specialists who may be attending to an elderly person. This ensures that unnecessary medicines are dropped

The goal of care at all times is to optimise the quality of life. As family, professional caregivers and friends we should always show respect so that the dignity of the elderly is preserved at all times. For those of us who are not yet in the age group with such challenges, we need to start the conversation about the type of care we will prefer and take steps to stay healthy and independent for as long as possible. The goal should be a long Healthspan and not just a long Lifespan.

AS ALWAYS LAUGH OFTEN, ENSURE HYGIENE, WALK AND PRAY EVERYDAY AND REMEMBER IT’S A PRICELESS GIFT TO KNOW YOUR NUMBERS (blood sugar, blood pressure, blood cholesterol, BMI)

Dr. Kojo Cobba Essel

Health Essentials Ltd (HE&W Group)

(dressel@healthessentialsgh.com)

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*Dr. Essel is a Medical Doctor with a keen interest in Lifestyle Medicine, He holds an MBA and is an ISSA Specialist in Exercise Therapy, Fitness Nutrition and Corrective Exercise. He is the author of the award-winning book, ‘Unravelling The Essentials of Health & Wealth.’

 Thought for the week “There is no magic formula to being happy but making a conscious effort to be happy goes a long way.” – Dr. Kojo Cobba Essel

By Dr. Kojo Cobba Esse

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Health Essentials

Why Ghana’s ‘no bed syndrome’ is a policy failure, not a clinical failure -Part 2

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Kwabena Mintah Akandoh -Minister of Health

The call to action

We must move beyond the cycle of temporary outrage. I propose a four-point blueprint for the Ministry of Health and the government:

1.       A Digital Bed-Tracking Command Centre: Legally mandate all public and major private hospitals to update a live, digital bed-registry every hour. The NAS must be able to see a vacancy before they move. This must be matched with the available resources and services so that the right patient will be sent to the right facility.

2.       Strategic Capacity Expansion: We must stop building “prestige projects” and start building high-volume stabilisation centres. We need a targeted investment to triple the ER bed count in Accra and Kumasi within 24 months. This should then be extended to other regional capitals.

3.       Specialised Emergency Hubs: Designate specific hospitals as “Centres of Excellence” for Cardiac and Stroke care (and for other health emergencies), ensuring they have 24/7 imaging and intervention capabilities as well as the requisite expertise to manage these conditions. Policy makers must incentivise public-private partnerships to ensure that a heart attack in Accra or Kumasi can be treated with the same urgency as one in New York.

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4.       Develop a nationwide trauma system: This is extremely important because trauma is a major cause of deaths in Ghana. In the US, each state has a statewide trauma system with three levels. Level 1 trauma centres are usually University Teaching hospitals that provide comprehensive trauma care and also play an important role in local trauma system development, regional disaster planning, increasing capacity and advancing trauma care through research. Level II trauma centres are expected to provide initial definitive trauma care for a wide range of injuries and injury severity.

Level III centres provide definitive care to patients with mild trauma. Having such systems is imperative to ensure proper treatment of trauma patients.

Even for those who survive trauma, disability is a major assault on economic potential and viability.  Importantly all this cannot happen with a cash and carry system. Emergencies should be managed under a different model to save life and limb first. Obviously, there is a need to ensure that healthcare facilities will be able to recover their investments in emergency care, and that balancing act needs careful consideration.

Frontline clinicians are often forced to bear the public’s anger for infrastructure deficits they did not create and cannot fix. This is a failure of governance, not a lack of clinical care. Responsibility lies with the policy makers who manage the nation’s resources.

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The “No Bed Syndrome” is a systemic disease. It cannot be cured with a directive from the Ministry of Health, parliament or a lecture on ethics. It requires a blueprint, a budget, and the political will to treat this like the menacing threat it is.

It is safe to say that non-emergent healthcare is excellent in Ghana for the most part if you can afford it. However, emergency care is suboptimal. We had a sitting president die from an emergency health issue and a former vice president also die from an emergency. If that is not enough warning, it is clear that anyone can be a victim of an emergency.

If we do not act, the next ambulance driving aimlessly through the streets of Accra could be carrying anyone, including the very people who have the power to fix this issue.

Prof. Jonathan Laryea is a Professor of Surgery at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock. Arkansas. He is board certified in General Surgery, Colorectal Surgery and Clinic Informatics.

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He is a graduate of the University of Ghana Medical School (Class of 1997)

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