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  2. Self-care - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-care

    Getting an appropriate amount of sleep each night is a form of self-care. Chronic illness (a health condition that is persistent and long lasting, often impacts one's whole life, e.g., heart failure, diabetes, high blood pressure) requires behaviors that control the illness, decrease symptoms, and improve survival such as medication adherence and symptom monitoring.

  3. Management of depression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Management_of_depression

    With more chronic forms of depression, the most effective treatment is often considered to be a combination of medication and psychotherapy. [6] [9] Psychotherapy is the treatment of choice in people under 18. [8] A meta-analysis examined the effectiveness of psychotherapy for depression across ages from younger than 13 years to older than 75 ...

  4. Sleep hygiene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sleep_hygiene

    Sleep hygiene is a behavioral and environmental practice [2] developed in the late 1970s as a method to help people with mild to moderate insomnia. [2] Clinicians assess the sleep hygiene of people with insomnia and other conditions, such as depression, and offer recommendations based on the assessment.

  5. wikiHow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WikiHow

    wikiHow is an online wiki-style publication featuring informational articles and quizzes on a variety of topics.Founded in 2005 by Internet entrepreneur Jack Herrick, its aim is to create an extensive database of instructional content, using the wiki model of open collaboration to allow users to add, create, and modify content.

  6. Self-hypnosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-hypnosis

    Self-hypnosis or auto-hypnosis (as distinct from hetero-hypnosis) is a form, a process, or the result of a self-induced hypnotic state. [1]Frequently, self-hypnosis is used as a vehicle to enhance the efficacy of self-suggestion; and, in such cases, the subject "plays the dual role of suggester and suggestee".

  7. Bed trick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bed_trick

    Shakespeare employs the bed trick to yield plot resolutions that largely conform to traditional morality, as do some of his contemporaries; in the comic subplot to The Insatiate Countess (c. 1610), Marston constructs a double bed trick in which two would-be adulterers sleep with their own wives. Shakespeare's successors, however, tend to use ...

  8. Music and sleep - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_and_sleep

    Music can reduce sympathetic nervous system activity, decreasing blood pressure and heart rate. [17] The decrease in systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, and heart rate signal a state of calmness, which is essential for having a good night sleep.

  9. Wake therapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wake_therapy

    The response rate to sleep deprivation is generally agreed to be approximately 40-60%. A 2017 meta-analysis of 66 sleep studies with partial or total sleep deprivation in the treatment of depression found that the overall response rate (immediate relief of symptoms) to total sleep deprivation was 50.4% of individuals, and the response rate to partial sleep deprivation was 53.1% [3] In 2009, a ...