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    Sleep Deprivation

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    Azevedo‚ et.al cited from Shapiro et al. 1980). With regard to this uncertainty‚ a study conducted to find out whether sleep deprivation really affects the academic performance of the students or not. This study will provide information about the present condition of Visayas State University-Alangalang Campus students with regard to sleep deprivation. Accordingly‚ it will be valuable for the awareness of VSU-AC Students. II. Objectives: 1. To determine the relationship between lack

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    Sleep deprivation

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    Literature Review of Sleep Deprivation Sleep deprivation is a pattern of sleeping where an individual fails to get enough sleep during the night. On average‚ adults need seven to eight hours‚ were teens and children need an average of nine hours of sleep to feel well rested (1). Numerous literatures expand on the topic of sleep deprivation and the effects it has on the human body. This literature can be divided into three parts: 1) studies that show how sleep deprivation causes changes in learning

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    Sleep Deprivation

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    Effects of a quality sleep for college student’s academic achievements “Do college/university students with good sleep quality differ in academic achievement than university students with poor sleep quality” Researchers believe that improved sleeping habits result in better academic performance. Studies have indicated that over 60% of college students were poor quality sleepers‚ resulting in daytime sleepiness and an increase of physical and psychological problems (Lund et al.‚ 2010; Sing and

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    sleep deprivation

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    Sleep Deprivation Among College Students Introduction A college student that wants to receive that good grade point average at the end of the semester does not always receive the recommended six to eight hours of sleep every night. Not only is sleep just something we need‚ it is a necessity and is needed to keep our bodies healthy. This‚ as a college student‚ is a very typical way to get through four years of school‚ a lack of rest and a lot of homework. As a college student‚ we tend to spend

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    1
 Maternal Health in Afghanistan Introduction Six years ago‚ the reality of Afghanistan’s maternal mortality rate (MMR) sent shockwaves through the international health community‚ and resolving the issue became a key priority in the interim government’s strategy. The poor state of maternal health in Afghanistan is due to a range of medical factors as well as social‚ political‚ economic and environmental determinants. To address the situation‚ Afghanistan’s Ministry of Health (MoH) introduced

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    Inmate Deprivation

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    According to the study performed by Catherine Marcum‚ Carly Hilinski-Rosick and Tina Freiburger‚ certain factors in both the deprivation and importation models can influence an inmate’s tendency to violate prison rules. However‚ the model that I believe that seems to make the most logical sense is the deprivation model. Deprivation theory suggests that inmate socialization was a specific response to the losses suffered while an individual was imprisoned (Sykes‚ 1958). In other words‚ it argues that

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    health system that is controlled by a centralized government has crippled the progress of reproductive health. Giving birth in Somalia is extremely dangerous and very unpredictable. Somali woman are among the highest risk women in the world with a Maternal Mortality (MMR) of 1‚044-1‚400 per 100‚000 live births compared to a 12 per 100‚000 in the United States.1 Even after a mother survives all these risks and delivers her baby‚ both mother and child continue to face constant risks. The under-five infant

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    Sleep Deprivation

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    Sleep Deprivation Essay Circadian rhythms are biological changes that occur on a 24-hour cycle. This is the earth’s cycle of days and nights that our bodies adapt to by developing a pattern of bodily functions. Our alertness‚ core body temperature‚ moods‚ learning efficiency‚ blood pressure‚ metabolism‚ and pulse rate all follow these circadian rhythms. When these rhythms are disrupted‚ that is when we begin to have problems with our sleep. A lack of sleep causes increased fatigue‚ decreased concentration

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    Sleep Deprivation

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    iThe Effects of Sleep Deprivation on Individual Productivity Sleep is a basic necessity of life. The current 24-hour society‚ we use precious nighttime hours for daytime activities. In the past century‚ we have reduced the average sleep time by 20 percent and‚ in the past 25 years‚ added a month to the average annual work time (National Sleep Foundation‚ 1999). The sleep habits of society has changed but the bodies of individuals have not. Sleep problems have become a modern epidemic that

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    Sleep Deprivation

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    are biologically driven to sleep longer and later than adults do‚ the effects of these sleeping patterns are even more disastrous (Carpenter 1). However‚ the high school education system does not seem to recognize the negative effects that sleep deprivation can have on high schoolers‚ and continue to have school classes start at an obscene time of morning. Each of us has a specific daily sleep requirement. The average sleep requirement for high school students is well over eight hours. If this amount

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