Lux is a way to measure how bright a light source is, as perceived by humans. (If you want the complete skinny, look up "lux" in Wikipedia.) Roughly, one lux is the same as moolight at high altitude in tropical areas. In order to create a device for relief of SAD, for those of us who are Winter Challenged, we have to stuff 10,000 of those moons into one single little metal box.
10,000 lux is the standard number of lux needed for the treatment of SAD. But if you don't want to deal with all those moons (figuratively speaking) you can, like the nice lady in the illustration to the right, use a BioBrite Deluxe Light Visor.
The Deluxe Light Visor has a variable light output of between 500 and 3000 lux, meaning that the wearer can control the lux output and the time of the light session by means of two knobs on the battery pack that comes with the Visor.
But, you are wondering, is a device with 3000 lux as effective as one with 10,000 lux?
Yes, because the light source sits much closer to your eyes, and therefore much less light is lost to diffusion. Peer reviewed tests have shown that the Visor is, indeed, as effective as a light box, and the Visor goes with you. You do not have to sit in one place to absorb the beneficial lux.
Thursday, October 04, 2007
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Later Mornings; Earlier Evenings
As the days shorten down in the rush to the Winter Solstice, we the Winter Challenged can, without treatment, feel our energy fading, being squeezed, perhaps, by the collapsing day.
We know that treatments by a powerful (10,000 lux) light source can help improve our mood and energy level. But perhaps some do not know that a SunRise Clock can "set the table" for a light therapy treatment.
A SunRise Clock is one that fades up in the morning to brightness, and fades down in the evening to dark. It wakes a person by flooding his or her room with light, not sound. (Although they do have back up alarms, if made by BioBrite.) This mini light therapy has been found in small tests to enhance the effectiveness of standard light therapy.
For the Winter Challenged, who need every advantage we can get when fighting off SAD, the SunRise Clock starts a day with light when we need it most.
We know that treatments by a powerful (10,000 lux) light source can help improve our mood and energy level. But perhaps some do not know that a SunRise Clock can "set the table" for a light therapy treatment.
A SunRise Clock is one that fades up in the morning to brightness, and fades down in the evening to dark. It wakes a person by flooding his or her room with light, not sound. (Although they do have back up alarms, if made by BioBrite.) This mini light therapy has been found in small tests to enhance the effectiveness of standard light therapy.
For the Winter Challenged, who need every advantage we can get when fighting off SAD, the SunRise Clock starts a day with light when we need it most.
Friday, August 17, 2007
We Winter Challenged REALLY Have a Problem
Those of us who are Winter Challenged sometimes cause hesitancy and head scratching among health providers. When the Winter Challenged seek help from our family practitioners, we are frequently tested for such conditions as: underactivity of the thyroid, hypoglycemia, or perhaps chronic viral infections such as the Epstein-Barr virus. And these tests regularly come out negative, causing our health providers to wonder if we are simply haunting their offices because we like the magazines in the waiting room. And causing us to feel faintly guilty for taking up the time of busy professionals.
Seasonal Affective Disorder is a real condition, for which there is no laboratory test. According to Normal Rosenthal, MD, "The diagnosis is made on the basis of history alone."
So if you think you may be one of us, the Winter Challenged, if you just get run down when the short days come, suggest to your family doctor that you may have SAD and tell him or her the symptoms. If that is the problem, BioBrite has the tools that may allow you to beat the winter and let the sunshine in.
Seasonal Affective Disorder is a real condition, for which there is no laboratory test. According to Normal Rosenthal, MD, "The diagnosis is made on the basis of history alone."
So if you think you may be one of us, the Winter Challenged, if you just get run down when the short days come, suggest to your family doctor that you may have SAD and tell him or her the symptoms. If that is the problem, BioBrite has the tools that may allow you to beat the winter and let the sunshine in.
Thursday, August 09, 2007
The Earth is Tilting Towards Short Days in the North
Uh ohh. It is happening right on schedule. Mornings are starting to take longer to get here and nightfall is creeping down the clock face from 9 towards 5.
Those of us among the Winter Challenged know to get the lights ready, for our 20 minutes to one hour daily sessions with powerful UV free lighting that we use to lighten up our psychic load in the bleak winter months.
We at BioBrite would like to remind you that we invented and patented and are selling our Delux Light Visor for the Winter Challenged. We even conducted the research (reviewed by the National Institute of Health and NASA) that shows that our Deluxe Light Visors are as effective as a full sized light box.
And the neat thing is, when you are wearing a Deluxe Light Visor for a therapeutic light session, you can still move around, get your coffee, or get your treadmiling done for the day. That kind of two-fer is enough to brighten anyone's day.
Those of us among the Winter Challenged know to get the lights ready, for our 20 minutes to one hour daily sessions with powerful UV free lighting that we use to lighten up our psychic load in the bleak winter months.
We at BioBrite would like to remind you that we invented and patented and are selling our Delux Light Visor for the Winter Challenged. We even conducted the research (reviewed by the National Institute of Health and NASA) that shows that our Deluxe Light Visors are as effective as a full sized light box.
And the neat thing is, when you are wearing a Deluxe Light Visor for a therapeutic light session, you can still move around, get your coffee, or get your treadmiling done for the day. That kind of two-fer is enough to brighten anyone's day.
Monday, June 25, 2007
Sun Screen
It is tempting, for us, the Winter Challenged, to soak up the energy giving sun during the gloriously long and light filled summer days. But beware, as I have noted before, the UV rays of the sun are harmful if we stay in them too long.
So we should use suntan lotion, which used to be called "suntan lotion". But no longer. In the constant upgrading of both language and products that we subject ourselves to, boring old suntan lotion has been divided into "sun block" or "sun screen." And there is the SPF.
We have all seen bottles of sunscreen with big SPF numbers on them, 15 or 30 or 45 are the common ones, I think. The higher numbers are sure more powerful and better. Right?
Not so fast, amigo. SPF stands for Sun Protection Factor, and it measures the length of time a product protects us, not the strength of the product. It might take 15 minutes for a skin to redden without protection. SPF 15 protects us 15 times longer than without protection; or, for four hours. But we should reapply sunscreen, at whatever strength, every two hours. So for most of us, most times, SPF 15 is just fine. SPF 30 protects 30 times longer, and blocks only 4% more sunrays. 30 times longer is 8 hours, during which you should reapply three times anyway, so buy the SPF 15.
So we should use suntan lotion, which used to be called "suntan lotion". But no longer. In the constant upgrading of both language and products that we subject ourselves to, boring old suntan lotion has been divided into "sun block" or "sun screen." And there is the SPF.
We have all seen bottles of sunscreen with big SPF numbers on them, 15 or 30 or 45 are the common ones, I think. The higher numbers are sure more powerful and better. Right?
Not so fast, amigo. SPF stands for Sun Protection Factor, and it measures the length of time a product protects us, not the strength of the product. It might take 15 minutes for a skin to redden without protection. SPF 15 protects us 15 times longer than without protection; or, for four hours. But we should reapply sunscreen, at whatever strength, every two hours. So for most of us, most times, SPF 15 is just fine. SPF 30 protects 30 times longer, and blocks only 4% more sunrays. 30 times longer is 8 hours, during which you should reapply three times anyway, so buy the SPF 15.
Friday, June 15, 2007
Early to bed.....
The long summer days make Ben Franklin's saying about Early to bed and early to rise... kind of hard to carry out. Going to bed early in the long summer evenings means getting down before sundown. The Scaninavians must be used to that, but most of us here in the United States are not.
Similarly, the sun comes peeking up in the morning way earlier than many would like.
For those of us who are winter challenged, it is wonderful. For those who lack our unique characteristic, it can be rather a bore.
But the "fade up" and the "fade down" of the sun is the basis for the SunRise Clocks that BioBrite makes. Our SunRise Clocks fade up and gently wake you in the morning and fade down and help you fall to sleep in the evening.
Just like the sun.
The alternative alarm clocks - the ones that bleat you out of bed in the morning, and don't provide soothing fading light in the evening - seem to us to be unnatural. Or maybe unsunny.
Similarly, the sun comes peeking up in the morning way earlier than many would like.
For those of us who are winter challenged, it is wonderful. For those who lack our unique characteristic, it can be rather a bore.
But the "fade up" and the "fade down" of the sun is the basis for the SunRise Clocks that BioBrite makes. Our SunRise Clocks fade up and gently wake you in the morning and fade down and help you fall to sleep in the evening.
Just like the sun.
The alternative alarm clocks - the ones that bleat you out of bed in the morning, and don't provide soothing fading light in the evening - seem to us to be unnatural. Or maybe unsunny.
Friday, June 08, 2007
The UPside of UV rays
The Deluxe Light Visors we at BioBrite sell are UV free, meaning that you will not be overexposed to UV rays when getting your dose of energy during the SAD months. But, like everything, it turns out there is a downside to UV free. ("UV" means Ultra Violet, a part of the light spectrum that humans cannot see.)
The UV rays are the rays that we filter out in our light appliances are the UV rays that work with your skin to create Vitamin D. Sufficient Vitamin D, a new study at the Creighton University School of Medicine indicates, as reported in the media on 8 June 2007, shows that people with sufficient Vitamin D are 60% less likely to come down with any kind of cancer.
(The study was on 1,200 adult women and is not considered conclusive because of its relatively small size. But the reduction of cancer among those studied was clear.)
Thus, in the grey winter months, when the sun don't shine, it may do you well to take a Vitamin D supplement. The authors of the Creighton study suggest a 1,000 IU's during the winter.
Talk to your health care provider before buying Vitamin D supplements. If you decide to, the tall guy next in line might be me. Say hi.
The UV rays are the rays that we filter out in our light appliances are the UV rays that work with your skin to create Vitamin D. Sufficient Vitamin D, a new study at the Creighton University School of Medicine indicates, as reported in the media on 8 June 2007, shows that people with sufficient Vitamin D are 60% less likely to come down with any kind of cancer.
(The study was on 1,200 adult women and is not considered conclusive because of its relatively small size. But the reduction of cancer among those studied was clear.)
Thus, in the grey winter months, when the sun don't shine, it may do you well to take a Vitamin D supplement. The authors of the Creighton study suggest a 1,000 IU's during the winter.
Talk to your health care provider before buying Vitamin D supplements. If you decide to, the tall guy next in line might be me. Say hi.
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