Sleep Patterns in Elementary School Children (Grades 2-5) and Adolescents (Grade 10)


Autoria(s): Cattry, Deepika; Stavitsky, Karina; Au, Rhoda
Data(s)

20/07/2011

18/04/2013

20/07/2011

Resumo

Background: To date, there is limited research examining sleep patterns in elementary school children. Previous researchers focused on parental responses rather than student responses to determine factors that affect sleep. The presented study surveyed sleep patterns and examined external factors affecting total sleep time among elementary school children and adolescents. Methods: Students in grades 2-5 (n=885) and grade 10 (n=190) enrolled in a public school system in the Northeast, completed a district administered survey that included questions on sleep duration and hygiene. Results. Average reported sleep duration decreased with increasing grade level. Children in grades 2-5 woke up earlier (31.7-72.4%) and on their own in comparison to adolescents in grade 10 (6.8%). Significantly shorter sleep durations were associated with having a television (grades 2, 4, 5, p< 0.01) or a cell phone in the room (grades 3, 4; p < 0.05), playing on the computer or video games (grades 3, 4, p<.001) before going to bed. In contrast, students in grade 2, 3, & 4 who reported reading a book before going to bed slept on average 21 minutes more per night (p=.029, .007, .009, respectively). For tenth graders, only consumption of energy drinks led to significant reduction in sleep duration (p<.0001). Conclusion. Sleep is a fundamental aspect in maintaining a healthy and adequate life style. Understanding sleep patterns will assist parents, health care providers, and educators in promoting quality sleep hygiene in school-aged children.

Partial funding was provided by BU UROP (Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program).

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/2144/1423

Idioma(s)

en_US

Palavras-Chave #School-aged children #Sleep #Sleep hygiene #School-based survey #Adolescents
Tipo

Image