Olorunmoteni Oluwatosin Eunice, Fatusi Adesegun O, Gómez-Olivé F Xavier, Scheuermaier Karine
Department of Paediatrics and Child Health, College of Health Sciences, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Osun State, Nigeria; Wits Sleep Laboratory, Brain Function Research Group, School of Physiology, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
School of Public Health, University of Medical Sciences, Ondo, Ondo State, Nigeria; Department of Community Health, College of Health Sciences, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Osun State, Nigeria.
Sleep Med. 2025 Mar;127:158-165. doi: 10.1016/j.sleep.2025.01.020. Epub 2025 Jan 20.
Poor sleep is increasing worldwide but sleep studies, using objective measures, are limited in Africa. Thus, we described the actigraphy-measured sleep characteristics of Nigerian in-school adolescents and the differences in these sleep characteristics in rural versus urban-dwelling adolescents using actigraphy plus a sleep diary.
This comparative, quantitative study involved 170 adolescents aged 13-19 attending six rural and six urban schools in southwestern Nigeria. Participants wore actiwatches and filled sleep diaries concurrently for one week. We ran a mixed model analysis with each sleep characteristic as a dependent variable in each model and the fixed effects of age, weekday versus weekend, rural versus urban residence, sex, and religion.
The adolescents were 54.1 % females with a mean age of 15.6 ± 1.3 years. Overall, adolescents' mean bedtime was 22.50 ± 0.85, mean waketime was 5.73 ± 0.68 and mean total sleep time (TST) was 06.07 ± 0.95 h. On both weekdays and weekends, urban adolescents had significantly later bedtimes, earlier waketimes, shorter time-in-bed (TIB) and TST (all p < 0.05) while rural adolescents had lower sleep efficiency, more frequent awakenings and WASO (all p < 0.05). In mixed-model analyses, older adolescents had later bedtimes (p = 0.035) and shorter TST (p = 0.047), urban adolescents had later bedtimes, earlier wake times, shorter TIB and TST than rural adolescents (all p < 0.05), and on weekdays, all adolescents had earlier bedtimes, waketimes, shorter TIB and TST than on weekends (all p < 0.05).
Adolescents, especially the urban ones, had insufficient sleep with a catch-up-sleep on weekends. Multipronged interventions, including controlling causes of late bedtimes and delaying school start-times are needed to improve sleep, especially among older and urban adolescents.
全球范围内睡眠质量差的情况日益增多,但在非洲,使用客观测量方法的睡眠研究却很有限。因此,我们描述了尼日利亚在校青少年通过活动记录仪测量的睡眠特征,以及使用活动记录仪和睡眠日记对农村与城市青少年的这些睡眠特征差异进行的研究。
这项比较性定量研究涉及170名年龄在13 - 19岁的青少年,他们来自尼日利亚西南部的六所农村学校和六所城市学校。参与者同时佩戴活动记录仪并填写睡眠日记,为期一周。我们进行了混合模型分析,每个睡眠特征作为每个模型中的因变量,年龄、工作日与周末对比、农村与城市居住情况、性别和宗教作为固定效应因素。
青少年中女性占54.1%,平均年龄为15.6±1.3岁。总体而言,青少年的平均就寝时间为22.50±0.85,平均起床时间为5.73±0.68,平均总睡眠时间(TST)为06.07±0.95小时。在工作日和周末,城市青少年的就寝时间显著更晚,起床时间更早,卧床时间(TIB)和总睡眠时间更短(所有p<0.05),而农村青少年的睡眠效率更低,觉醒更频繁且清醒时间更长(所有p<0.05)。在混合模型分析中,年龄较大的青少年就寝时间更晚(p = 0.035)且总睡眠时间更短(p = 0.047),城市青少年比农村青少年就寝时间更晚,起床时间更早,卧床时间和总睡眠时间更短(所有p<0.05),并且在工作日,所有青少年的就寝时间、起床时间、卧床时间和总睡眠时间都比周末更早(所有p<0.05)。
青少年,尤其是城市青少年,睡眠不足且在周末会补觉。需要采取多方面干预措施,包括控制晚睡原因和推迟上学时间,以改善睡眠,特别是在年龄较大的青少年和城市青少年中。