The researchers focused on 368 normal weight children between 2 and
6 years old who were at risk for becoming overweight because they
were born at a high birth weight, had heavy parents or came from a
low-income family.
At the start of the study, parents recorded sleep diaries for their
children over 7 days, noting how much total rest kids got and
whether the children took naps, slept through the night, had
difficulty falling asleep or waking up, or suffered from other sleep
issues. Parents also completed food diaries.
The children who got the least amount of nighttime sleep on average
were more likely to become overweight during the following 1.3
years, the study found. Kids who became overweight were also more
likely to consume a lot of sugary foods and drinks.
“Our study showed that children with the highest sleep variability
consumed higher amounts of added sugars and sugary beverages but
lower amounts of fruits and vegetables compared with children with
lower sleep variability,” said lead study author Anna Rangan of the
University of Sydney.
“This suggests that children who have less variable sleep duration,
or better sleep routines, have better dietary quality than those who
may have less stringent sleep routines,” Rangan said by email.
While plenty of previous research has linked inadequate sleep to
obesity in both children and adults, less is known about toddlers
and young children with a high risk of obesity because of their own
birth weight or parents’ weight and income, researchers note in the
International Journal of Obesity.
At age 2, kids should get 11 to 14 hours of sleep in a 24-hour
period, including naps, according to guidelines from the American
Academy of Pediatrics. From age 3 to 5, kids need 10 to 13 hours of
sleep including naps, and starting at age 6 doctors recommend 9 to
12 hours of sleep.
At the start of the study, the children were getting an average of
10.7 hours of sleep a night, though this ranged from 8.8 hours to
12.5 hours.
Children who slept more than 10.7 hours on average had significantly
less weight gain than kids who slept less than 10.4 hours, the study
found.
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Kids who slept less were more likely to have trouble falling asleep
- and to go to their parents’ bed at night - than children who got
more rest, the study also found.
One limitation of the study is that researchers relied on parents to
accurately recall and report on children’s sleep routines, the
authors note. It’s also possible that some unmeasured or poorly
measured factors like socioeconomic status, family characteristics
or physical activity might influence the connection between sleep
and obesity.
Even so, the findings add to previous research linking inadequate
sleep to increased caloric consumption and poor food choices, said
James Gangwisch, a psychiatry researcher at Columbia University in
New York who wasn’t involved in the study.
“Eating a poor diet, inadequate physical activity and being
overweight can also contribute toward disturbed sleep,” Gangwisch
said by email.
Parents can help children get more sleep by enforcing a regular
sleep schedule even on weekends and holidays, creating a calming
bedtime routine, and removing electronics from the bedroom, said
Stacey Simon, a pediatric sleep psychologist at Children’s Hospital
Colorado and the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus in
Aurora.
“Teaching kids that sleep is a priority – and modeling this behavior
– by blocking out enough time to get the right amount of sleep is
important, especially as children get older and become more
independent,” Simon, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by
email.
“In addition to weight, we know that insufficient sleep has a
negative impact on children’s behavior, mood, and cognition,” Simon
added. “So getting the right amount of sleep is extremely
important.”
SOURCE: http://go.nature.com/2yEeJHn International Journal of
Obesity, online September 8, 2017.
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