Department of Biobehavioral Health, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA.
School of Aging Studies, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL.
Sleep. 2019 Feb 1;42(2). doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsy212.
High school start times (SSTs) directly impact adolescents' sleep timing and duration. This study investigated the associations between SSTs and actigraphically-measured 24-hour sleep duration, sleep onset, sleep offset and sleep quality.
This study included 383 adolescents (Mage = 15.5, SDage = 0.6 years) participating in the age 15 wave of the Fragile Families & Child Wellbeing Study, a national birth cohort study sampling from 20 large US cities. Multilevel models used daily observations (N = 1116 school days, Mdays = 2.9, SDdays = 1.4 per adolescent) of sleep and SSTs from concordant daily diary and actigraphy.
A diverse range of SSTs were included in our analyses (MSST = 08:08, SDSST = 39 minutes, RangeSST = 06:00-11:05), and are presented in the following categories for ease of interpretation: before 07:30, 07:30-07:59, 08:00-08:29, and 08:30 or later. Adolescents starting school at 08:30 or later exhibited significantly longer actigraphically-assessed 24-hour sleep duration (by 21-34 minutes, p < .05) and later sleep offset (by 32-64 minutes, p < .001) when compared with the adolescents grouped by earlier SSTs. SSTs were also analyzed continuously for comparison with existing literature, and results indicated that every 1-hour delay in SST was significantly associated with 21 minutes longer 24-hour sleep duration (p < .001), 16 minutes later sleep onset (p < .01), and 39 minutes later sleep offset (p < .001). All models controlled for covariates including socioeconomic status.
These findings support pediatric and public health expert recommendations for SSTs after 08:30. In our diverse national urban sample, adolescents with SSTs at 08:30 or later, compared with adolescents with earlier SSTs, had significantly longer actigraphy-measured sleep.
中学开始时间(SST)直接影响青少年的睡眠时间和时长。本研究调查了 SST 与通过活动记录仪测量的 24 小时睡眠时长、入睡时间、醒来时间和睡眠质量之间的关联。
本研究纳入了 383 名青少年(平均年龄为 15.5 岁,SDage=0.6 岁),他们参加了脆弱家庭和儿童福利研究的第 15 波研究,这是一项从美国 20 个大城市抽取的全国性出生队列研究。多水平模型使用每日观察(N=1116 个上学日,每个青少年的平均天数为 2.9,SDdays=1.4)来记录睡眠和 SST,这些数据来自每日日记和活动记录仪的一致性记录。
我们的分析包括了各种不同的 SST(MSST=08:08,SDSST=39 分钟,RangeSST=06:00-11:05),并为便于解释分为以下几类:早于 07:30、07:30-07:59、08:00-08:29 和 08:30 或更晚。与按更早的 SST 分组的青少年相比,08:30 或更晚开始上学的青少年通过活动记录仪评估的 24 小时睡眠时长显著增加(增加 21-34 分钟,p<0.05),醒来时间也显著推迟(增加 32-64 分钟,p<0.001)。还对 SST 进行了连续分析,以便与现有文献进行比较,结果表明 SST 每延迟 1 小时,24 小时睡眠时长就会显著增加 21 分钟(p<0.001),入睡时间延迟 16 分钟(p<0.01),醒来时间延迟 39 分钟(p<0.001)。所有模型都控制了包括社会经济地位在内的协变量。
这些发现支持儿科和公共卫生专家关于 SST 应在 08:30 以后的建议。在我们的多元化全国城市样本中,与更早开始 SST 的青少年相比,SST 在 08:30 或更晚的青少年通过活动记录仪测量的睡眠时间明显更长。