Researchers surveyed 4,948 secondary school students in Hong Kong,
ages 12 to 18, about their sleep habits and their physical and
mental health. Overall, about 23 percent had a night owl or "eveningness"
circadian rhythm, or a natural tendency to be late-to-bed and
late-to-rise types.
Night owls were 88 percent more likely to have emotional and
behavioral problems than other teens and 25 percent more likely to
have poor mental health.
Roughly half of these night owls had insomnia symptoms, especially
trouble getting to sleep and staying asleep. Insomnia was
independently associated with more than tripled odds of emotional,
behavioral and mental health issues.
"Not getting enough sleep or having poor sleep may negatively affect
one's ability to regulate emotions and decision making, thereby
contributing to the risk of developing mental health problems," said
lead study author Shirley X. Li of the University of Hong Kong.
"There is a bi-directional relationship between sleep disruption and
emotional and behavioral problems," Li said by email. Poor sleep may
lead to mental health issues, and behavioral or emotional problems
may also cause difficulties with sleep.
Roughly two-thirds of the teens in the study were considered
"intermediate-type" sleepers, meaning their biological clocks
weren't set for an exceptionally early or late bedtime. About 9
percent of the participants were early to bed, early-to-rise types
with a "morningness" circadian rhythm.
Among participants with an "eveningness" circadian rhythm, about 11
percent had difficulty falling asleep and almost 4 percent had
trouble staying asleep.
A greater proportion of these night owls, 22 percent, also reported
poor mental health, compared to about 15 percent of other teens, as
well as emotional and behavioral problems: 38 percent versus 24
percent.
The study wasn't a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how sleep might cause mental health issues, nor does it explain
whether or how behavioral or emotional problems might cause poor
sleep.
[to top of second column] |
Another limitation is that researchers relied on teens to recall and
report on their sleep habits and mental health issues, which might
not always be accurate, the authors note in Sleep Medicine.
Even so, the results offer fresh evidence of the relationship
between short sleep duration and poor sleep quality and emotional
and behavioral health in teens, said Dr. Judith Owens, director of
sleep medicine at Boston Children's Hospital and a researcher at
Harvard Medical School.
"While insomnia has been clearly linked to these adverse outcomes in
previous studies, this study suggests that insomnia and evening
chronotype are independently associated with these outcomes," Owens,
who wasn't involved in the study, said by email.
Parents may not be able to reset teens' biological clocks, but they
can still take steps to help their kids get a better night's sleep,
said Dr. Sujay Kansagra, director of the Duke Pediatric Neurology
Sleep Medicine Program in Durham, North Carolina.
"The adolescent brain is different, and it is very normal for the
teenage brain to have a delayed preference when it comes to going to
bed late and waking up late," Kansagra, who wasn't involved in the
study, said by email.
"The goal is to ensure there are not other factors that can worsen
this intrinsic predisposition even further, thereby causing more
sleep deprivation," Kansagra added. "The keys are to avoid nighttime
light exposure, especially from electronic devices, for 30 minutes
prior to bed."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2k342bv Sleep Medicine, online April 17,
2018.
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |