
Ex-BA cabin crew reveals how to stop jet lag ruining your holiday - and sleep experts agree
Millions of people will be traversing the globe in pursuit of adventure and relaxation in peak season but anyone who's ever felt the curse of jet lag will know that a long haul hop comes at a price.
However, a former British Airways cabin crew worker, who's clocked up thousands of airmiles across the world's 24 time zones, has revealed her top tips for beating the lag - and a sleep expert agrees with her.
According to new research by Well Pharmacy Online Doctor, the impact of jet lag on our holidays is real, and can even affect several days of our precious time away.
The study found that 86 per cent of British people say they're affected by jet lag when they travelling across time zones.
And almost one in ten (8 per cent) says it can kick in so badly that three or more days of their holiday are impacted by how they sleep - or don't.
In the survey, women were found to be more severely affected by jet lag than their male counterparts.
Ex BA staff member Saskia Sekhri has revealed her tips - alongside a skincare 'secret weapon', which she says she used to frequently rely on while flying long distances.
Saskia explains that fighting sleep is the best way to head the lag off at the pass.
She says: 'Staying awake until local bedtime after landing is a good way to beat jet lag as it helps you acclimatise to local conditions.
'Essentially, it forces your internal body clock to sync with the local time, helping your circadian rhythm.'
She adds that when you're at 38,000ft you can also try and keep the light close to you in the cabin natural, as well as staying hydrated.
'Alongside this, another little-known hack is to elevate your legs to help with circulation and lymphatic drainage.'
After landing a cold shower can help too Saskia adds, and she swears by 'dandelion tablets or drinking dandelion tea post-flight to beat the dreaded post-flight puffiness.'
Sleep expert Dave Gibson agrees, telling MailOnline: 'Long-haul travel can significantly disrupt your sleep due to its impact on your circadian rhythm - the internal body clock that regulates sleep, hormones, and metabolism.
'The main issue is that your body clock remains set to your original time zone, especially with crossing multiple zones, making adaptation harder, while cabin pressure changes can cause discomfort and dehydration, further impacting energy levels.'
Take eye masks and earplugs to drown out light and sound, and keep using them when you check in your hotel to enhance sleep, Gibson suggests.
And instead of taking medication such as melatonin to regulate the body clock artificially, both Saskia and Dave are fans of the herbal route.
Saskia says: 'Cabin crew often refer to the morning after taking jet lag medication as similar to "a hangover"'.
Dave says look to your garden for a natural remedy, saying: 'Not only is lavender a calming soporific scent and a great sleep aid, but it can also help reduce something called 'first night effect', which is essentially our natural alertness when sleeping in a new bed, the stress of which can keep you awake. Having a familiar scent in the room can help.'
According to the research, the most common remedies travellers currently turn to are drinking more water, adjust meal times and their sleep schedule to local time and avoiding caffeine or alcohol.
What you eat in the skies can help too, says Saskia. She advises: 'Avoid salty, spicy and food with a lot of garlic. Instead, stick to light meals: fruit and veggies, and protein snacks. I'd sometimes even add celtic salt and lemon to my water bottle, to restore electrolytes lost from cabin dehydration. The lemon also provides that little boost your digestion needs while adding a hint of Vitamin C.'
And Gibson says natural yoghurt, packed with probiotics for gut flora can also help, explaining: 'One problem with long-haul travel is that it affects your gut biome, which is the inner ecosystem of our digestive systems.
'Having probiotic foods (which include kombucha and kimchi too or even taking a probiotic supplement can get the bacteria reset again and this in turn reduces jet lag's effects on your digestive system.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
22 minutes ago
- The Independent
Ministers face backbench calls to widen access to top tier of sickness benefits
Ministers are facing Labour backbench calls to widen access to their proposed top tier of sickness benefits. Labour backbencher Graeme Downie has proposed a welfare reform Bill amendment, so universal credit claimants with Parkinson's or multiple sclerosis who cannot work do not face repeated medical assessments to receive a payout. If MPs back his amendment, patients with 'evolving' needs who cannot work could also qualify for a higher rate of benefits. The Government's Bill has already cleared its first Commons hurdle at second reading, after work and pensions minister Sir Stephen Timms vowed not to restrict eligibility for the personal independence payment (Pip), with any changes coming in only after a review of the benefit. To meet his promise, ministers have had to table amendments to their own draft new law, to remove one of its seven clauses, which MPs will debate next Wednesday. Universal credit claimants with Parkinson's 'are already possibly struggling financially', Mr Downie told the PA news agency ahead of the debate. He added: 'The cost of living with a condition like Parkinson's can be very high. 'You may well require or need additional support.' The Dunfermline and Dollar MP said patients who struggle with their motor control might buy pre-chopped vegetables or chicken. 'Those things are expensive, so if you're already on universal credit and you're struggling, being able to do that significantly impacts your health, it significantly impacts your ability to live properly,' he continued. As part of the Government's reforms, the Department for Work and Pensions has proposed a new 'severe conditions criteria' for universal credit. Claimants in this category will be entitled to a higher rate of the benefit, and will not be routinely reassessed to receive money. To qualify, claimants must have limited capability for work or work-related activity (LCWRA) and symptoms which 'constantly' apply. Mr Downie's amendment would expand these criteria to claimants with 'a fluctuating condition'. It would cover 'conditions like Parkinson's but also multiple sclerosis, ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis), long Covid and a whole range of other conditions where, you know, in the morning things could be really good and in the afternoon things could be really bad, and even hour by hour things could change', he said. 'I felt it was necessary to table an amendment to really probe what the Government's position is on this, and ensuring that people with Parkinson's and conditions like that are not excluded from even applying and being considered.' Mr Downie's proposal has backing from 23 cross-party MPs. Juliet Tizzard, external relations director at Parkinson's UK, said: 'Criteria in the Bill say that a new claimant for the universal credit health payment will have to be 'constantly' unable to perform certain activities to qualify. 'This doesn't work for people with Parkinson's, whose symptoms change throughout the day. ' People with Parkinson's and other fluctuating conditions like multiple sclerosis will be effectively excluded from getting all the financial support they need. 'The Government has responded to our call and withdrawn the damaging restrictions to Pip. 'Now, they must do the same with the universal credit health element. The health of many people with Parkinson's is in their hands.'


Times
39 minutes ago
- Times
How Picasso and Old Trafford nerves inspired Juan Mata's art exhibition
Juan Mata is speaking to me from Asturias in northwest Spain. It is a chat via Zoom and so to bridge the gap to London I hold up my tea, which is in a bright red and yellow Valencia CF-branded mug, and in a flash we are smiling and joking like old friends. 'Valencia was very important for me, it was the beginning of everything. So yeah, it should be also in the conversation,' Mata, who made 174 appearances for the Spanish club before joining Chelsea, with whom he won the Champions League, Europa League and FA Cup, in 2011, and then Manchester United three years later. His is an exceptional career in which he also won the World Cup and the Euros with Spain, and it is not over yet. He spent last season in Australia with Western Sydney Wanderers and has yet to decide if he will return there in August. His friends warned him, when he told them he was joining the A-League, that Australia was a cultural desert. And why should this have worried them? Because Mata, 37, loves art. He loves it so much that he has curated, for Manchester, an exhibition, Football City, Art United, where visitors can experience collaborations between 11 artists and 11 footballers. It is an intriguing idea, the most compelling of which comes from the imagination of Eric Cantona, and is about encouraging visitors to understand the pressures of fame by picking out at random a member of the public and placing them under a constant spotlight as they explore the art space. Is such a spotlight something that has been a strain for Mata over his career? 'I love to be anonymous,' he says. 'I love to be in places where you don't get so much attention. I enjoy very much the attention on the pitch. I like to be a kind of protagonist on the pitch every time I try to play football. But off the pitch I'm more comfortable not being in the spotlight and being a bit more relaxed. I had experiences in Japan [with Vissel Kobe] and in Australia where you can live a little bit more relaxed than in certain cities in Europe due to the relevance of football. But one who has been, and still is and probably will always be, in the spotlight is Eric Cantona.' As someone who knows exactly who is her favourite painter — and Mata very politely asks me to spell out Vilhelm Hammershoi so he can look him up — I naturally want to know who is his favourite, but he says it is a process that has taken him from Picasso to Pollock. 'I love to be anonymous and in places where you don't get attention' 'It's for me difficult to have one favourite thing,' he says. 'Whenever I did interviews in the past about one movie, one song, one book, I have many, so it's difficult to single one out. My journey with art started when I was living in Madrid and Reina Sofía is one of my favourite museums. So whenever I wanted to disconnect, apart from doing many other things, I used to go there. And when I saw Guernica, the Picasso painting, for the first time, it was quite striking. After that, and as I got older, I started to read more and visit more galleries and exhibitions, and when I was living in England, I used to go to Whitworth Gallery a lot, which I love. 'It's one of my favourite spaces in Manchester. And then I started to get to know people, like Hans [Ulrich Obrist, artistic director of the Serpentine Gallery and co-curator of the Football City project]. I also met people in Spain, art historians, and I started to learn about the different periods in time. And then I started to realise, oh, okay, I like abstract expressionism, for example. So I like Pollock, I like Lee Krasner, I like [Mark] Rothko. But I also like [René] Magritte, a surrealist. And I also like architecture, for example, Le Corbusier or Tadao Ando. It was very common to see buildings from him when I was living in Japan. And in Japan, I had the chance to go to Naoshima, which is this beautiful island full of art. So it's difficult to pick a single, one artist. It's just a process.' Mata switches effortlessly from discussing art to football, which is why, presumably, this new exhibition is possible. Visitors will gain entry through a tunnel devised by Edgar Davids, the former Dutch midfielder, which is supposed to help the public experience what it feels like to leave the quiet of the dressing room and then stride into a baying arena. 'For me, the tunnel at Old Trafford has always been really special,' he says. 'I mean, it's that beautiful stadium, the Theatre of Dreams, and you're there every two weeks walking through that tunnel and getting to a pitch where you know there's going to be 75,000 people. 'It's quite intense, but also exciting. So it's just the moment before you have to perform and it's the moment where you actually can think about what you want to do. And you can feel the nerves of your team-mates, you can see the opposition team at the same time, lining up. I think it's a very, very important ritual that we have in the sport.' The time difference in the Antipodes meant Mata could not watch as many United games as he would have liked, but he saw enough to understand the club suffered a 'tough season'. 'I like the coach [Ruben Amorim], a young coach with a lot of positivity and energy, and hopefully he can turn things around. Of course, there has been a change in the ownership of which are trying to create financial sustainability in the club. I think they admitted that that was their priority. So hopefully from now on they can really grow on the pitch. That's what I would love. I love the club. 'I like Pollock, I like Krasner, I like Rothko. But I also like Magritte' 'I have so many friends there. I speak a lot with Bruno [Fernandes], who is a very enthusiastic player. And when things are not going well, he suffers a lot. So, I hope that this year is the year where things can be a bit more stable on the pitch and they can really build and bring United where I believe they should be, which is fighting for the biggest trophies there are.' I mention how the arrival of Amorim was widely assumed to mean Fernandes would struggle to be involved. 'I think if Bruno doesn't fit into any system, you should create a system in which he can fit because he is just so good as a player and as a person, as a leader,' Mata says. 'I think he is instrumental for Man United.' United's decline is one of football's great mysteries, as is the way Spain, at club and international level, know how to win so unerringly. When Chelsea won the Conference League in May it brought to an end a run of 27 finals involving Spanish domestic and international teams that they had won. Mata also won the Champions League and Europa League with Chelsea DARREN WALSH/GETTY IMAGES 'I don't have the 100 per cent accurate reply,' he says, before giving as close to a complete assessment as you will get, 'but I think it's a combination of things. 'I think one is the relevance and importance of football in our society and of course it is the same in England too and in other countries. But in Spain, football is like a religion. You have the big teams, you have the smaller teams, which in the smaller cities everyone follows. 'All kids play football since the age of two or three. Before more than now, I would say, and I think that's something generational. But we have, I believe, a good understanding of the game. 'We have good coaches, so we have good education coming through the academies. We have teams that normally give opportunity to the players, so we have a good system of how to get to our first team with the academy, with Segunda División and the different leagues that we have. We have, I would say, a good mentality and a good understanding of what being a professional football player means. So, like you say, competition is something that we are born with. 'I saw foxes… I don't know if that's a sign that my spirit animal is a fox' 'We always think about playing in a nice way, but also trying to win all the time. I remember when I was in the Spanish national team, under-15 and under-16, we were always competing for winning. I think that gets into your DNA. Basically, I think it's a great system, a good context, great coaches, and innate talent with the ball, which comes from so many people playing in the streets, in the parks and everywhere else.' Mata believes Spain's all-enveloping football culture has been key to their success in the sport ANTHONY DEVLIN FOR THE TIMES And then comes the most surreal moment of any interview I have conducted with an elite player as Mata asks me if he should be buying chicken for the foxes that cross his path. This is because Ella Toone's artwork is inspired by the United midfielder's spirit animal, which is a Shetland Pony — which leads me to wonder if Mata has a spirit animal. 'Lately, and this is actually very good timing for your question, I keep seeing foxes. I don't really know what that means, but over the last year, I was living in London for some time before going to Australia and I was seeing foxes more often than other people that I know, especially at night. So I don't know if that's a sign that my spirit animal is a fox.' Cue a lecture from me on how I keep an extended family of foxes going with shed loads of fresh chicken every week. 'Oh, wow. OK,' he says. 'Good idea.' And my work is done.


The Guardian
40 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Labour's 10-year health plan for the NHS is bold, radical
The government's 10 Year health plan to revive, modernise and future-proof the NHS in England – has arrived as the service is facing a dual crisis. It has been unable for a decade now to provide the rapid access – to GPs, A&E care, surgery, ambulances and mental health support – which people need and used to get. Normalisation of anxiety-inducing, frightening and sometimes fatal delay has produced a less tangible, but also dangerous, crisis – of public satisfaction, born of a profound loss of trust that the NHS will be there for them or their loved ones when they need it. Barely one in five people in Britain are happy with the NHS. Polling by Ipsos this week, ahead of the NHS's 77th birthday on Saturday, found that about 60% of voters have seen little improvement in it during Labour's first year in office. About the same proportion do not expect things to be much better by the time of the next election in 2029. It is hyperbole to say, as the plan does, that 'the NHS now stands at an existential brink'. The dissatisfaction with access problems is acute – but behind it lies enduring public support for the service itself. However, it is no wonder Keir Starmer and Wes Streeting have acknowledged the seriousness of the patient's condition and diagnosed radical surgery. It is blindingly obvious that, as the plan says: 'The status quo is no longer an option.' The authors of the 168-page document have produced a serious, detailed and impressive piece of work. It is unsparing in describing the many failings that mean the NHS is not just often frustrating for patients to use but also ill equipped to deal with the relentless demand for care created by an ageing, growing and increasingly unhealthy population, which is unlikely to fall soon. It also charts a new course for a service so indispensable that it is part of the nation's DNA. Labour's repeated claim that the Conservatives had left the NHS 'broken' helped win them last year's general election. And it has allowed the party during its time in government to blame the service's every dysfunction – staff shortages, overcrowded hospitals, inadequate mental health care – on its predecessors. But that time is over. The plan implicitly acknowledges that this narrative, a frequent refrain by Streeting, is no longer enough. After a year in power, this is Labour's prescription for how it will nurse the patient back to health. This – progress on delivering the planned transformation – is now a legitimate yardstick by which to judge Labour's stewardship of the nation's most treasured institution. Sign up to First Edition Our morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion The plan is as bold and radical as Streeting insists. But its key objectives – 'three big shifts' in the NHS's modus operandi from analogue to digital, treatment to prevention and hospital to community-based care – are familiar. They have been the stuff of previous NHS plans, and multiple inquiries, for decades – much promised, but rarely delivered. For example, the planned network of new 'neighbourhood health centres', with teams of health professionals and patient-friendly long opening hours, are very similar to the 'Darzi centres' proposed by the last Labour administration, of which few actually opened. Streeting does not pretend that the job of transformation will be easy. But there is a daunting array of obstacles to overcome. Will money needed to temporarily 'double run' old and new services during the transition be found? Will staff used to working in hospitals prove willing to switch to community settings? Will the gamble on technology pay off? Will the plan's failure to include big shifts to improve public health – such as mandatory reformulation of food or minimum unit pricing of alcohol – mean that the tidal wave of often-avoidable illness continues to outrun the NHS's ability to treat it? And will the decision to shed half of NHS England's 15,300 staff during its merger with the Department of Health and Social Care mean that Streeting does not have enough progress-chasers to ensure his tablets of stone are yielding real change? But the greatest risk Streeting faces is time. Alan Milburn, health secretary under Tony Blair and now Streeting's chief adviser, admitted later that the 2000 NHS plan bought him time to rescue the service from the derelict state his predecessors had left it in. But the often snail-like pace of previous NHS reforms suggests that, despite Labour having four more years in power, even that may not be enough for this plan to produce real, tangible benefits – changes to waiting times and the convenience of interacting with the NHS that patients notice. Voters keen to see 'our NHS' restored and improved may need to temper their expectations of rapid change, and ministers may have to do so too.