Department of Health Sciences, Brock University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Niagara Region, 1812 Sir Isaac Brock Way, St. Catharines, ON, L2S 3A1, Canada.
School of Public Health and Health Systems, University of Waterloo, 200 University Ave, Waterloo, ON, N2L 3G1, Canada.
Sleep Health. 2017 Oct;3(5):309-316. doi: 10.1016/j.sleh.2017.06.006. Epub 2017 Jul 12.
Limited Canadian studies have examined youth sleep over time. This study explored sleep duration over recent years among youth, patterns over the course of secondary school, and subgroups at greater risk of sleep deprivation and problematic trajectories.
Longitudinal survey.
PARTICIPANTS/SETTING: Secondary school students in Ontario and Alberta, Canada.
In cross-sectional analyses, student-reported sleep duration was analyzed in three waves of the COMPASS study (Y: 2013/2014, Y: 2014/2015, Y: 2015/2016), and differences by student-level (race/ethnicity, grade, sex) and school-level (urbanicity, median household income) variables were tested in the most recent wave. For the longitudinal analyses, group-based trajectory modeling was conducted using 3-year linked data, adding risk factors as predictors of problematic trajectories.
Average sleep durations declined over the 3 study waves, resulting in less than half of youth meeting the guideline of 8-10 hours per night. Four trajectory groups comprised almost 90% of participants, with 8.8% of students classified as long sleepers, whereas more than one-third of students belonged to 2 sleep-deprived trajectory groups (short [9.3%] and low-normal [26.7%]). In both the cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses, longer sleep durations were more likely among students who identified as male, White, in earlier grades, and attending schools in areas with higher median household income and classified as rural/small urban, relative to their counterparts.
Results support the necessity of continued surveillance and interventions to monitor and counteract what appears to be an ongoing trend of diminishing sleep and a growing number of sleep-deprived adolescents. Targeted efforts in less affluent and more metropolitan areas warrant consideration.
加拿大的一些有限研究调查了青少年的睡眠情况随时间的变化。本研究旨在探究近年来青少年的睡眠持续时间、中学阶段的睡眠模式以及睡眠不足和出现问题轨迹风险较高的亚组。
纵向调查。
参与者/设置:加拿大安大略省和艾伯塔省的中学生。
在 COMPASS 研究的三个时间点(Y:2013/2014、Y:2014/2015、Y:2015/2016)的横断面分析中,学生报告的睡眠时间进行了分析,在最近的时间点测试了学生层面(种族/族裔、年级、性别)和学校层面(城市、家庭中位数收入)变量的差异。对于纵向分析,使用 3 年链接数据进行基于群组的轨迹建模,将风险因素作为出现问题轨迹的预测因子。
在 3 个研究波中,平均睡眠时间呈下降趋势,导致不到一半的青少年达到每晚 8-10 小时的指南要求。四个轨迹组涵盖了近 90%的参与者,其中 8.8%的学生被归类为长睡眠者,而超过三分之一的学生属于 2 个睡眠不足的轨迹组(短睡眠[9.3%]和低正常睡眠[26.7%])。在横断面和纵向分析中,与对照组相比,男性、白人、低年级、就读于家庭中位数收入较高的地区且被归类为农村/小城市的学生更有可能有较长的睡眠时间。
结果支持持续监测和干预的必要性,以监测和对抗似乎持续减少的睡眠和越来越多的睡眠不足青少年的趋势。在不太富裕和更都市化的地区,有针对性的努力值得考虑。