Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA; Division of Sleep Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Division of Behavioral Medicine and Clinical Psychology, Cincinnati, OH, USA; University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
Sleep Health. 2022 Dec;8(6):632-639. doi: 10.1016/j.sleh.2022.08.001. Epub 2022 Sep 28.
Commonly held beliefs about sleep unsupported by scientific evidence (ie, myths) among adolescents and their parents/caregivers may adversely influence sleep-related attitudes and behaviors among adolescents. Thus, identifying such myths with the goal of developing effective evidence-based counter-messages has the potential to improve sleep health in adolescents.
We identified myths with a panel of adolescent sleep health experts (n = 12) using the Delphi method in three sequential steps: (1) focus groups; (2) online discussion; and (3) closed-ended questionnaires with which the experts rated myths on: (1) falseness and (2) public health significance using 5-point Likert scales ranging from 1 (not at all false/important for public health) to 5 (extremely false/important for public health). Next, we explored the prevalence of the myths among a demographically diverse sample of parents/caregivers of adolescents in the United States. Finally, we report the counterevidence to refute each myth.
Ten myths about adolescent sleep were identified by the experts using the Delphi method. The most prevalent myths were the beliefs that (1) "Going to bed and waking up late on the weekends is no big deal for adolescents, as long as they get enough sleep during that time," reported by 74% of parents/caregivers; (2) "If school starts later, adolescents will stay up that much later," reported by 69% of parents/caregivers; and (3) "Melatonin supplements are safe for adolescents because they are natural," reported by 66% of parents/caregivers.
Parents/caregivers have the potential to serve as sleep health advocates for their adolescent and support their adolescent's sleep health behaviors. Our study found that many parents/caregivers endorse myths about adolescent sleep that may hinder their ability to support their adolescent's sleep health. Future research may explore methods for promoting evidence-based beliefs about adolescent sleep among parents/caregivers.
青少年及其父母/照顾者中普遍存在的未经科学证实的睡眠观念(即“误区”)可能会对青少年的睡眠相关态度和行为产生不利影响。因此,确定这些误区,并制定有效的基于证据的对策,有可能改善青少年的睡眠健康。
我们使用德尔菲法(Delphi method),由一组青少年睡眠健康专家(n=12)分三个步骤识别误区:(1)焦点小组;(2)在线讨论;(3)使用 5 分制李克特量表(1 表示“一点也不虚假/对公众健康重要”,5 表示“极其虚假/对公众健康重要”)对每个误区的虚假性和公共卫生意义进行在线问卷调查。接下来,我们在一个具有代表性的美国青少年父母/照顾者样本中探索这些误区的流行程度。最后,我们报告了反驳每个误区的反证据。
专家们使用德尔菲法确定了 10 个关于青少年睡眠的误区。最普遍的误区包括:(1)“青少年周末晚睡晚起没什么大不了的,只要他们在那段时间睡够了”,74%的父母/照顾者认同这一观点;(2)“如果学校推迟上课时间,青少年就会晚睡那么多”,69%的父母/照顾者认同这一观点;(3)“褪黑素补充剂对青少年是安全的,因为它们是天然的”,66%的父母/照顾者认同这一观点。
父母/照顾者有潜力成为青少年睡眠健康的倡导者,并支持他们的青少年的睡眠健康行为。我们的研究发现,许多父母/照顾者认同关于青少年睡眠的误区,这可能会阻碍他们支持青少年睡眠健康的能力。未来的研究可能会探索在父母/照顾者中推广关于青少年睡眠的基于证据的信念的方法。