This Is What’s Keeping Teens from Getting Enough Sleep
Up to a third of teens in the U.S. don’t get enough sleep
each night, and the loss of shut-eye negatively impacts theirgrades, mental wellbeing
and physical health. Biologically, adolescents need fewer hours of slumber than
kids—but there's a bigger reason for teens' sleep loss, according to a new
study in the journal Pediatrics.
MORE:The Power of Sleep
Katherine Keyes, an assistant professor of epidemiology at
Columbia University, looked at survey data from more than 270,000 8th,
10th and 12thgrade students at 130 public and
private schools across the country, gathered between 1991 and 2010. Each
student was asked two questions about his or her sleep habits: how often they
slept for at least seven hours a night, and how often they slept less than they
should.
She found that over the 20-year study period, adolescents
got less and less sleep. Part of that had to do with the fact that
biologically, teens sleep less the older they get, but Keyes and her team also
teased apart a period effect—meaning there were forces affecting all of the
students, at every age, that contributed to their sleeping fewer hours. This
led to a marked drop in the average number of adolescents reporting at least
seven hours of sleep nightly between 1991-1995, and 1996-2000.
That surprised Keyes, who expected to find sharper declines
in sleep in more recent years with the proliferation of cell phones, tablets
and social media. “I thought we would see decreases in sleep in more recent
years, because so much has been written about teens being at risk with
technologies that adversely affect the sleep health of this population,” she
says. “But that’s not what we found.”
Instead, the rises in the mid 1990s corresponded with
another widespread trend affecting most teens—the growth of childhood obesity.
Obesity has been tied to health disturbances including sleep changes such as
sleep apnea, and “the decreases in sleep particularly in the 1990s across all
ages corresponds to a time period when we also saw increases in pediatric
obesity across all ages,” says Keyes. Since then, the sleep patterns haven’t
worsened, but they haven’t improved either, which is concerning given the
impact that long term sleep disturbances can have on overall health.
Keyes also uncovered another worrying trend. Students in
lower-income families and those belonging to racial and ethnic minorities were
more likely to report getting fewer than seven hours of sleep regularly than
white teens in higher-income households. But they also said that they were
getting enough sleep, revealing a failure of public health messages to adequately
inform all adolescent groups about how much sleep they need: about nine hours a
night.
“When we first started looking at that data, I kept saying
it had to be wrong,” says Keyes. “We were seeing completely opposite patterns.
So our results show that health literacy around sleep are not only critical but
that those messages are not adapted universally, especially not among
higher-risk groups.”
content and image source This Is What’s Keeping Teens from Getting Enough Sleep
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