Mattress and box springs
Tips on how to buy a mattress and box spring are found here. Do you really have a bad back--or just a bad bed? Buying a new mattress set can be confusing and expensive--a queen set can cost $ 400 or $ 4,000. Most of us spend one-third of our lives in bed, though, so it's worth it to find one that's just right for your body.
Look at construction, not price. A $ 400 mattress and box spring may be as good as a $ 700 set. In more-expensive pocket-spring mattresses, each spring rests in its own fabric pocket and responds independently to the weight above. In less-expensive continuous-spring mattresses, a single length of wire forms the springs. 2. Test mattress support by lying beside your sleeping partner; you shouldn't roll toward each other and one person shouldn't feel motion as the other leaves the bed. 3. Consider coil count and the gauge of the wire in the coils as indicators of firmness (and often quality). Generally, the more coils, the firmer the mattress, although thicker wires can compensate for fewer coils. Lower gauge means the wire is thicker. 4. Consider a waterbed--helpful for some back problems--or an airbed, where electronically controlled air pockets adjust firmness for each person. Make sure your floor can accommodate a waterbed's weight. 5. Check out latex rubber and viscoelastic mattresses ($ 900 to $ 3,000) by brands such as TrueSleep and Tempurpedic.
The dense foam is energy absorbing, heat sensitive and self-adjusts to body mass and temperature. Allergy and dust-mite resistant, this mattress doesn't need to be turned. 6. Take a test nap on a polyurethane foam mattress ($ 150 to $ 400). They also self-adjust and come in various thicknesses and firmnesses. Place on a platform bed or box spring. 
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