Introducing
the New Day-Light Sky
Clinically
proven technology.
Meets stringent Bright Light Therapy Standards.
Features BrightZone technology.
Smaller and more discreet for home and office.
Versatile - Bright Light Therapy system and a task lamp.
Five-year limited warranty.
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Importance of Light:
Light is
essential to maintaining normal, healthy physiology. Exposure to the
sunrise is a key factor in synchronizing our internal body cycles or
circadian rhythms to the external world (so we sleep when it is dark
and are alert during the day).
Modern industrial society, combined with human migration to
northern latitudes, has tampered with this cycle and the resulting loss
of natural light exposure - in dark apartments, in the workplace, on
shift work, etc. For many, this leads to ongoing light deprivation,
making us vulnerable to mood disorders, sleep problems, fatigue, poor
ability to concentrate, and more.
Light Therapy
Up-Lift Day Light
What
is Light Therapy?

~ daily scheduled exposure to intensive levels of artificial light.
What is Light Therapy used for?
~ for treating Seasonal Affected Disorder (SAD) which is a type of
recurrent major depression experienced by some people during the Fall
and
Winter months.
How can I benefit from using Light
Therapy?
~ if you experience any combination of the following symptoms during
the winter months: feeling down, moodiness, loss of energy, fatigue,
lethargy,
excessive sleeping, etc.
Our Home Health Care Dept.
carries the Day Light 10,000
Lux System for rent or purchase. We also have information
available & are happy to help answer your questions.
SAD - Seasonal Affective Disorder:
Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) is a
debilitating, mood disorder with a predictable pattern of recurrence
during the fall and winter. Experts estimate that as many as 10 million
North Americans may experience SAD. Initial symptoms may include
feelings of lethargy, trouble waking and getting up or cravings for
heavy or carbohydrate-rich foods.
These initial symptoms often lead to a mild mood disorder for
a few weeks and then may progress to chronic low mood, inability to do
work, loss of pleasure in usual activities, etc. Symptoms are often
most acute in January and February. The severity of symptoms, are the
indicator experts use to differentiate mild winter blues from more
acute SAD. With both conditions, as days become longer, symptoms tend
to clear up usually by early May.
Anyone can experience SAD cycles, even thought they may not
occur every year. Women of childbearing age appear to be the most
vulnerable, but SAD may occur from childhood through to old age, and
men can be just as strongly affected as women.
Bright light therapy is simple to administer and effective for
many SAD sufferers when using a well-designed bright light therapy
system on a regular daily schedule. Bright light may be "dosed" by
changing the intensity level, exposure duration and/or the time of day
when it is used. Generally, the recommended starting dose is 10,000 LUX
for 30 minutes in the morning soon after waking. Dosage is then
adjusted (increased or decreased) to suit the specific needs of the
user.
One large study of SAD patients undergoing bright light
therapy, published in the Archives of General Psychiatry, found
significant clinical improvement in about 80% of cases when bright
light was scheduled at the optimum early hour. If the bright light was
scheduled later, the response rate dropped to about 40%.
To determine the optimum treatment time for bright light
therapy, the Automated Morningness-Eveningness Questionnaire provided
by CET (Center for Environmental Therapeutics), is an excellent guide.
It may be used in consultation with your physician to prepare an
appropriate bright light therapy treatment schedule for your individual
condition.
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