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Rescue® Sleep calms your restless mind providing natural relief of occasional sleeplessness caused by stress and repetitive thoughts. - Non-habit forming - Non sedatives - No hangover - Fast acting spray - Insomnia Caused by Stress & Worries
Directions: Bring spray nozzle up to mouth and apply 2 sprays onto the tongue prior to retiring. Additional sprays my be taken during the night as needed. Active Ingredients: 5x (HPUS) dilution Aesculus hippocastanum - relief from repetitive thoughts Helianthemum nummularium - adds courage and presence of mind in the face of adversity Clematis vitalba - helps give focus when you are not grounded in reality Impatiens glandulifera - helps you cope calmly and patiently with irritating problems or people Prunus cerasifera - helps you act rationally and think clearly with a calm and balanced mind when you feel you are losing control Ornithogalum umbellatum - softens the impact of shock or fright Inactive Ingredients: 27% alcohol Warnings: Keep out or reach of children. If pregnant or breast-feeding, ask a health professional before use. Keep away from eyes. Stop use and ask a doctor if sleeplessness persists for more than two weeks. Insomnia can be a symptom of a serious underlying medical illness.
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Product Details
NEW: RESCUE SLEEP - Non-habit forming, fast acting natural sleep aid
At last a non-habit forming and fast acting natural sleep aid from the makers of Bach Rescue Remedy® is available as of today at your favorite health food and nutrition stores or can be ordered online at www.bachflower.com.
We Americans have a problem getting restful sleep. According to the National Sleep Foundation, about 70 million people in the United States experience sleep-associated problems. Almost 40 million Americans suffer from chronic sleep disorders, and an additional 20 to 30 million are affected by intermittent sleep-related problems. Even worse, most people ignore the problem; few think they actually have one. Only half of those polled by the foundation earlier this year were able to say they slept well on most nights; and one-fourth of adults say sleep problems have some impact on their daily lives
Richard Gelula, the foundation's CEO, said there's a link between sleep and quality of life.
"People who sleep well, in general, are happier and healthier,” he said. "But when sleep is poor or inadequate, people feel tired or fatigued, their social and intimate relationships suffer, work productivity is negatively affected, and they make our roads more dangerous by driving while sleepy and less alert.”
Concerns about feeling sleepy at the wheel is nothing to snooze at. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates that drowsiness accounts for 100,000 police-reported automobile crashes each year. The National Sleep Foundation report on a study by Knipling and Wang showed that car accidents related to sleep deprivation resulted in more than 1,500 fatalities and 71,000 injuries per year.
Sleeping medications, including sedative/hypnotic medications, like Ambien, are recommended for short-term use, but lots of people take them frequently and become dependent upon them to fall asleep. Sleep-inducing medications, especially when taken over long periods of time, stay in the bloodstream, giving a hangover the next day and beyond, impairing memory and performance on the job and at home. All medications interact with other medications to one degree or another, sometimes with harmful effects. Finding a natural product or modifying our patterns of behavior to get a good night sleep is a good first approach with little or no harmful consequences.
There are questions about the effectiveness of sleeping pills. A study by researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School found that a change in sleep habits and attitudes was more effective in treating chronic insomnia, over the short- and long-term, than sleeping pills (specifically Ambien).
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