Helping your child sleep better.

Helping your child sleep better.

Author: Mental Health Training Information December 12, 2022 Duration: 12:43

Helping your child sleep better.

The number of children being prescribed the previous jet lag hormone melatonin to help their child sleep has nearly tripled in the past seven years.

Melatonin is indeed not a sleep hormone but a biological marker of darkness.” For example, in humans and other diurnal animals, the release of melatonin into the bloodstream helps prepare the body for sleep. 

A recent study from the Netherlands suggested that teenagers’ sleep problems can improve after just one week by limiting evening exposure to light-emitting screens on mobile phones, tablets and computers. 

Overexposure before bedtime to blue light emitted from devices can affect the brain’s clock and the production of the melatonin hormone, resulting in disrupted sleep time and quality.

 So is sleep medication being overused by children?

Speaking to Colin Espie, a professor of sleep medicine in the Nuffield department of clinical neuroscience at the University of Oxford, is one of many leading experts worried by this trend. “We seem to be socialising our youngsters into the idea that sleep is difficult, and you need tablets for it,” he says. Instead, he explains, our focus should be on helping them to establish healthy sleep patterns at home.

As stark new NHS figures show, children are experiencing an epidemic of sleeping problems amid a sharp decline in their mental health triggered by the pandemic. Insomnia can exacerbate an underlying mental or physical health problem. 

Emma Thomas, YoungMinds’ chief executive, said: there is alarming pressure young people face with their mental health, with many experiencing isolation, loneliness, and reduced support caused partly by the pandemic.

Here are some valuable tips. 

Prepare children’s minds for sleep (even your three-year-old can meditate)

If we want children to sleep naturally, teaching simple, mindful noticing skills can be helpful, says Dr Guy Meadows, co-founder and clinical lead at the London clinic Sleep School. At Sleep School, children as young as three are taught to meditate. “You don’t tell them they’re meditating and put their favourite teddy on their tummy, lie on the floor with them, and they just watch the teddy go up and down.” It calms the mind, preparing it for rest.

You might also ask: “What are you grateful for today?” The important thing is that “we’re shifting the mind into a state more conducive to sleep”.

Don’t tell your nine-year-old to ‘go to sleep now!

We see an increase in sleep anxiety in children from the age of six, Meadows says — “an explosion of the mind’s ability to create worry”. Meanwhile, almost all parents tell their children, “It’s time to sleep!” or “Get to sleep now!” If a child is struggling, that can pressure them. Instead, say: “Let’s just see if you can rest.” Every child can rest. Rather than insist they sleep when you know they’re not ready, Espie asks: “How can my child have some quiet wakefulness?”

It’s essential to be a good role model, Meadows says. “You can’t expect your children to be off their devices if you’re sitting in bed watching Netflix, scrolling through your phone.”

Let your anxious seven-year-old sleep in your bed.

When primary-age children are anxious and sleepless, they often seek comfort in their parents’ beds. And many parents let them — for months. They often feel as if this is some failure. It’s the opposite, Espie says. No parent should feel guilty about this. Treating your child’s sleep issue as a shared responsibility takes effort and is the right thing to do. You’re guiding them towards better sleep habits. “This is about habit training,” he says.

In this situation, your child’s initial habit is struggling to settle and be awake alone in bed at night. They are stressed and need reassurance.” Letting him sleep with you solves that problem and breaks that habit.


We all navigate a world that constantly tests our emotional and psychological resilience, yet practical guidance on maintaining mental well-being can feel scattered or overly clinical. Mental Health Training cuts through the noise, offering grounded conversations that connect the dots between personal fitness, our cultural environment, and the health of our relationships. Hosted by Mental Health Training Information, each episode functions like an accessible workshop, translating complex psychological concepts into everyday language and actionable strategies. You’ll hear discussions that range from managing daily stressors and building emotional fitness to understanding how societal pressures shape our individual mental landscapes. This isn't about quick fixes; it's about cultivating a sustainable, informed approach to your inner life. The podcast draws from a broad spectrum of expertise, reflecting its roots in education and society, to provide listeners with a comprehensive toolkit. Tune in for a thoughtful blend of personal stories, expert insights, and practical exercises designed to strengthen your mental framework. Find more depth and continue the conversation beyond the audio by visiting the show's website for extended resources. This is a space for anyone looking to move beyond awareness and into the practice of genuine mental health training.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

Mental Health Training
Podcast Episodes
Five Steps to Shift Your Limiting Beliefs for Good [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 2:15
5 Steps to Shift Your Limiting Beliefs for Good How are you your own worst enemy? We limit ourselves so much. We live in our heads and come up with all these ways to keep us from getting anything accomplished. Even thoug…
Seven Tips for Restoring Your Self-Worth After a Toxic Relationship [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 2:42
Restoring Your Self-Worth After a Toxic Relationship Well, that didn’t go right. We walk into a relationship with so much enthusiasm. We think what we’ve found is the best thing in the world, which is a heady feeling for…
Love or hate work [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 2:09
Do You Love Or Hate Your Work? Back in my corporate days, I worked for a huge company where it was easy to become just another face in the crowd. It was your typical corporate setting where you would find many people who…
Am I Too Impatient? [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 2:16
Am I Too Impatient? The next time you get on an elevator, pay attention to the other passengers when they get on. The patient ones will step in, push the button to their desired floor, step aside and smile while they rid…
Reasons We Struggle with Patience [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 2:26
Reasons We Struggle with Patience The alarm fails to go off, so you oversleep. Now you are late, and you have a flat tire to make things worse. You know that if one more thing happens, you might explode with some expleti…
Embrace Your Failure [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 3:16
Great Leaders Embrace Failure – You Should Too If you hate failing, that's a good thing. It means you're driven. People that aren't fazed by failure or loss don't expect much of themselves. You're different. You're like…
Steve Jobs Gives You Permission to Be Different [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 2:47
Steve Jobs Gives You Permission to Be Different Steve Jobs was notoriously hard on his staff. It's well known that he could be difficult to work for. He was also superb at running Apple Inc., which he co-founded with Ste…
Sexual Orientation. [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 27:21
Gender identity Gender is used to describe the characteristics of men and women that are socially constructed, while sex refers to those that are biologically determined. Individuals are born male or female but learn to…