Top tips to improve bedtime with a child with eczema

 




Sleep is an essential part of children’s routines. A lack of sleep impacts attention span, behaviour, learning, memory, and overall mental and physical health. The effects of eczema on our children can add an extra layer of unneeded stress to bedtime. Our top tips can help you create a soothing bedtime routine.

 
General bedtime tips:

Establish a bedtime routine

The routine should ideally start at the same time every night. Establishing and maintaining good sleep habits helps your child fall asleep, stay asleep and wake up rested and refreshed.

Dim lights before bed

Light exposure is the most disruptive external factor affecting sleep. If your children need a nightlight to sleep use a dim, warm light that is less likely to disturb the brain’s internal clock. 

Stop use of electronics before bed

Blue light, found in many digital devices, has a short wavelength that stimulates sensors in the eyes and sends signals to the brain, tricking it into thinking it is daytime. Limiting the use of electronics/screens at least an hour before bed can make it easier to fall asleep and stay asleep.

Read bedtime stories

Choose a book with a calm theme to help your child relax. If they are still full of beans play their favourite lullaby instead. Listen to a couple of songs, relax together, and sing or hum.

 

Helpful bedtime tips for kids with Eczema:

Hot temperatures can aggravate eczema. The heat can stimulate that itchy, prickly feeling associated with eczema. Sweat may also be aggravating to eczema-prone skin as it contains various salts that not only dry out the skin but can also be irritating if the skin is broken due to scratching. Increased humidity in areas where moisture gets trapped, such as the elbows, the back of the neck, or the backs of the knees can cause eczema to worsen. This is why it’s essential to stay cool to improve the quality of sleep.

 

Bedding

Sheets which increase body temperature while you sleep can cause itching in the night. Try switching out your children’s bedding with duvets, blankets or quilts made from materials that will keep them cool, such as DermaTherapy Bedding. The lightweight fabric is woven from fibres with unique cross-sections that create micro-channels to wick heat and moisture away from the skin, regulating temperature throughout the night.

Control temperature

Body temperature helps regulate the sleep-wake cycle, and our body temperature drops as we wind down for sleep. There are many ways to control temperature before bedtime, starting with turning down the thermostat. Many experts recommend keeping the bedroom at a cool 18 °C.

Try to avoid vigorous activities too close to bedtime, as it can raise your children’s body temperature and keep them awake. Allow them to burn energy earlier in the day to ensure a better night’s sleep.

Introduce warm baths

Our body temperature begins to fall as we approach bedtime. Giving your little one a warm bath as part of their bedtime routine could help to make them sleepy and relaxed – reducing the stress they feel before bed, so they get a quality night’s sleep. Baths can also be great for hydrating very dry skin, reducing the tendency to scratch before bed. 

Moisturise

Our list would be incomplete if we didn’t include the importance of moisturising. Anyone with eczema knows, skin that’s dry and prone to cracking and flaking needs plenty of hydration. We recommend regularly applying an emollient to your child’s skin as instructed by your GP or dermatologist.

Sleepwear

Choosing your child’s pyjamas can have a big impact on how well they sleep. Like bed linens, airy and breathable fabrics are most likely to prevent itching. DermaSilk Therapeutic Clothing is clinically proven to calm sensitive skin. The smooth fabric is ideal for eczema sufferers and the bonded antimicrobial reduces bacterial contamination, keeping the fabric clean and fresh – perfect for soothing a flare-up.

 

To learn more about how DermaSilk can help with eczema visit our website.

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