Jet Lag - How Can Air Travelers Reduce The Risk When Flying?
Medical experts have found that air travelers usually experience a worse bout of jet lag when they fly from east to west. In general, the more time zones they cross when flying from east to west, the more severe the symptoms of jet lag they experience will be. However, when passengers travel on air flights that go from west to east they will only have a milder bout of jet lag.
If travelers fly north to south, or south to north, for thousands of miles, they will not experience jet lag. But when the pilot of the airplane starts flying in an east to west direction and crosses more than one or two time zones, they can experience jet lag.
Passengers will not usually have the symptoms of jet lag until they exit the plane. That is the time their biological clocks will start to make internal adjustments inside their bodies to coincide more closely with the local time at their destination. If air travelers cross one, or even two time zones, their bodies usually adjusts very quickly. However, if travelers are in poor health or not feeling well before the flight, jet lag can compound the problem.
Here are some tips on how you can lessen the effects of jet lag when you fly.
If possible, try to catch a flight that arrives at your vacation destination in daylight hours. when you arrive, immediately fit in with the new time zone and do not go to bed. If you’re tired and feel like you want to take a short snooze, do it in a well lighted place.
In the evening, go to sleep in a darkened room. The darkness will help prepare your brain for sleep.
If you can, avoid looking at television or computer screens as they are bright and have high frequencies that can easily over-stimulate your brain.
Do not consume alcohol or any drinks such as coffee and soda that contain caffeine until your symptoms of jet lag wear off, as it can disrupt your sleep.
To help you adjust to the time zone at your destination, you may want to consider taking a melatonin tablet or capsule (as many air travelers do) in the early evening (your time). You might still have to take a melatonin for the next three or four evenings in a row before you go to bed in this new location to help you readjust your biological clock. If you not taken melatonin before, you should ask your doctor or local pharmacist for more information in regards to the suggested dosage.
