ANNOUNCER: Gaining back good sleep might mean paying attention to what you do at bedtime.
CHARLES REYNOLDS, MD: A good doctor will recommend attention to lifestyle issues, particularly stability of sleep-wake schedule, not spending too much time in bed.
BROOKE JUDD, MD: If you find that you're in bed, you're not falling asleep, then you should get out of bed, pursue a relaxing activity. That would not be things like using the computer, because the light is activating, doing the checkbook, doing housework, doing work.
Another component is sleep restriction, and the idea is to make your sleep as efficient as possible and not to spend excessive amount of time in bed not sleeping. A final component of behavioral therapy is relaxation techniques. And that can vary from person to person. Some people do progressive muscle relaxation. Some people like to listen to relaxation tapes.
ANNOUNCER: Although long-term hormone replacement therapy may pose risks, some doctors might recommend hormone replacement therapy on the short-term in order to deal with the hormone changes that may be affecting patients' lives.
BROOKE JUDD, MD: There's a lot of controversy now about hormone replacement therapy, but estrogen replacement in patients with significant hot flashes can help decrease the hot flashes and improve, improve sleep quality.
ANNOUNCER: There are over-the-counter as well as prescription sleep medications that can help women on their way back to good sleep. Prescription medications fall into two categories.
CHARLES REYNOLDS, MD: There are basically two safe classes of sleeping pills currently appropriate and available in the US market: the traditional benzodiazepine sleeping pills and the newer types of non-benzodiazepine sleeping pills.
ANNOUNCER: While the symptoms of menopause are not permanent, sometimes the poor sleep it causes can become just that.
BROOKE JUDD, MD: So even when the menopausal symptoms pass, patients can still end up with the bad sleeping habits, waking up frequently even though they're not having hot flashes.
ANNOUNCER: Whatever the nature of the sleep problem, addressing it can make a very positive change in a woman's life.
CHARLES REYNOLDS, MD: If sleep problems are addressed, it generally means a much better quality of life, much better sense of daytime well-being, energy, mood and a chance at aging successfully.