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Journal Article

Citation

Owens J, Wang G, Lewin D, Skora E, Baylor A. Sleep 2017; 40(1): e04.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, American Academy of Sleep Medicine, Publisher Associated Professional Sleep Societies)

DOI

10.1093/sleep/zsw004

PMID

28364447

Abstract

STUDY OBJECTIVES:
To examine the association between self-reported sleep duration (SD) and peer/individual factors predictive of risky behaviors (risk behavior factors) in a large socioeconomically diverse school-based sample of early adolescents.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS:
Survey data collected from 10718 and 11240 eighth-grade students in 2010 and 2012, respectively, were analyzed.
INTERVENTION:
N/A.
MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS:
Self-reported school night SD was grouped as ≤4 hours, 5 hours, 6 hours, 7 hours, 8 hours, 9 hours, and ≥10 hours. Scores on 10 peer/individual risk behavior factor scales were dichotomized according to national eigth-grade cut points. The percentage of students reporting an "optimal" SD of 9 hours was 14.8% and 15.6% in 2010 and 2012, respectively; 45.6% and 46.1% reported <7 hours. Adjusted for covariates of gender, race, and SES, multilevel logistic regression results showed that odds ratios (ORs) for 9 of 10 risk factor scales increased with SD <7 hours, with a dose-response effect for each hour less sleep compared to an SD of 9 hours. For example, ORs for students sleeping <7 hours ranged from 1.3 (early initiation of antisocial behavior) to 1.8 (early initiation of drug use). The risk factor scale ORs for <5 hours SD ranged from 3.0 (sensation seeking) to 6.4 (gang involvement).
CONCLUSIONS:
Middle school students are at high risk of insufficient sleep; in particular, an SD <7 hours is associated with increased risk behavior factors.

KEYWORDS:
adolescent sleep; risk behavior.; sleep duration

Language: en

Keywords

adolescent sleep; risk behavior.; sleep duration

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