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Toolkit · sleep

Sleep: for both of you

Nights are where dementia care gets dangerous, and where caregivers break. Their sleep, your sleep, and how to measure what's actually happening.

Their sleep: the day builds the night

The disease damages the brain's day-night clock, so the goal is to supply the cues the clock can no longer generate:

Watch Sundowning and night-waking, handled calmly on screen: the sleep & sundowning shelf. For a day clock and sleep-tracking gear that works with dementia, see what to buy.
Considering melatonin? Read the label story first

Melatonin is the gentlest option on this page (worth raising with the doctor before anything stronger), but the evidence it actually helps sleep in dementia is weak, and the real problem lives on the bottle, not the molecule. A 2017 study of commercial supplements found actual melatonin content ranging from 83% below to 478% above the labeled dose, and 26% of products contained undisclosed serotonin. A 2023 JAMA letter tested 25 gummies and found 22 mislabeled. One had no melatonin in it at all. The one lever that works: buy only bottles marked USP Verified or NSF Certified, the mark that means an independent lab checked the contents against the label. The avoid list matters more than the take list: no Benadryl or "PM" products, no benzodiazepines, no Ambien-type sleep drugs, no alcohol as a sleep aid. All of them quiet the noise and worsen the two things that matter most: confusion and falls.

And if the problem is 3am, ask about the timing, not just the dose. Regular melatonin is spent within a few hours. It helps with falling asleep, then it's long gone by the early-morning wake-ups. A prolonged-release (timed-release) form releases slowly across the night to mimic the body's own curve, built for staying asleep, and it's the version with the most encouraging (still modest) sleep results in small Alzheimer's studies. More is not better: higher doses mostly buy grogginess and vivid dreams, not deeper sleep. Same rules as above: USP- or NSF-verified bottle, low dose, doctor's okay first. The exact phrase to bring to the appointment: "Could we try prolonged-release melatonin for the middle-of-the-night waking?"

The 3am "time to get up" loop: breaking it kindly

The pattern, if you're living it: they wake at 3am certain it's morning and start getting ready for the day. You steer them gently back to bed. Fifteen or thirty minutes later, it starts again, and again, and by dawn neither of you has had an hour of deep sleep. A run of nights like this is a medical problem for two people, not a character test, and it's worth attacking from every side at once:

In what order, and how to know it's working

Tonight, free: clothes into the closet, the amber path light, last big drink at dinner, the script, and lower the stakes with the night uniform. This week, ≈ $50 total: the recorded-voice sentry by the door (mounted out of their sight-line, so it doesn't become a curiosity), the day clock angled to the pillow, the body pillow if they sleep best on their side. At the next appointment: the apnea re-check if the waking is every-15–30-minutes · the prolonged-release melatonin question above · and the one that surprises families: "is anything on the medication list a sleep-stealer, or timed wrong?" Some memory medicines taken at night cause insomnia and vivid dreams (morning dosing is a common fix), and an evening water pill puts the bladder on night duty. Then judge fairly: give each change three to five nights before calling it, and let the sleep tracking below turn "I think it's better" into proof. Still looping after two weeks of all this? That's a doctor visit, not a failure. Say the words "fragmented sleep, for both of us."

Keeping them on their side, without keeping watch

For some sleepers, especially anyone with a sleep-apnea history, the side is simply the safe position: the airway stays open, the snoring and gasping quiet down, the night steadies. The problem is that nobody can stand guard over a sleeping position, least of all a spouse who needs her own sleep back. The fixes that work are the passive ones:

Tracking sleep accurately: what, why, how

Why bother: "he sleeps terribly" gets a shrug at the doctor's office; "asleep 11pm, up 2:10–3:40 nightly for two weeks, worse after evening TV" gets action: a medication review, an infection check, a real plan. Patterns are also how you discover that the 4pm nap, not fate, is causing the 2am wake-up.

What to record (a week or two is plenty): bedtime, time actually asleep, each night waking and what happened, morning wake time, naps, and anything unusual that day (skipped walk, visitors, new medication).

How: pick the option they'll tolerate. Scan the cards; the first one fits most dementia households.

Under-mattress sensor mat best fit

What
Thin strip under the mattress (Withings Sleep Analyzer, EMFIT are the established names)
Why
Records sleep, wake-ups, breathing, and bed exits, with nothing to wear, remember, or charge. The person never has to cooperate with it.
Cost
≈ $100–200 one-time
When
Nightly disruptions you need the doctor to see, or night-wandering worry

Bedside radar device

What
Contactless motion sensing from the nightstand (Google Nest Hub is the common one)
Why
Nothing touches them at all; good enough for patterns, doubles as a photo frame and music player
Cost
≈ $80–120
When
If anything under the mattress is disturbed by, or disturbs, the sleeper

Wearable ring or watch

What
Oura ring, Apple Watch, Fitbit: excellent sleep data
Why
Better for you than for them: a person with dementia removes, loses, or resents wearables, and the daily charging becomes your job. Track the caregiver's sleep. It matters just as much.
Cost
≈ $100–350, some with subscriptions
When
When you want proof of what the caregiving nights are costing you

Paper log + this site

What
Notepad by your bed; or log "Up at night" in the behavior log with what came before
Why
Free, nothing to install, and captures the one thing devices can't: what happened during the waking
Cost
$0
When
Tonight, and alongside any device above

Bed-exit alarms (pressure pads that chime when they get up) are safety, not tracking. They're on the home-safety page, and they pair with everything above.

Sleep changes worth telling the doctor about

Loud snoring with gasps or pauses: sleep apnea is common, treatable, and worsens cognition. Acting out dreams: shouting, punching, falling from bed during sleep can signal REM sleep behavior disorder, especially important in Lewy body dementia; the neurologist wants to know. A sudden flip of days and nights: sudden change is the infection-first rule again.

Sleep apnea: the treatable saboteur

Apnea starves a sleeping brain of oxygen dozens of times an hour. It worsens memory, mimics dementia symptoms, and untreated it accelerates decline. It comes in two main types, and the difference matters:

If CPAP is a no: the ladder that still helps. Get the sleep study first; it decides which of these apply, and a repeat study afterward is how you judge what actually worked, not the marketing. Start at the top. These ask nothing of a confused person:

One warning: mouth-taping is trendy online and genuinely unsafe for a confused person who may not be able to remove it.

Your sleep is part of the care plan