Gale Emma Louise, Cecil Joanne Elizabeth, Williams Andrew James
School of Medicine, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, Scotland, UK.
School of Health in Social Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.
Pediatr Obes. 2025 Nov;20(11):e70049. doi: 10.1111/ijpo.70049. Epub 2025 Aug 13.
Childhood obesity interventions often overlook sleep and emotional wellbeing, though research shows both are associated with weight status across childhood. The timing of their co-development and the most effective point for intervention remain poorly understood. The aim of this study was to examine the trajectories of sleep, weight status and emotional wellbeing using the Growing Up in Scotland birth cohort 1 dataset.
This study conducted secondary data analyses from sweeps 1-10 (10 months-14 years). Sleep was assessed through main-carer and self-reports, covering duration, bedtime, fragmentation, insomnia symptoms and oversleeping. Weight status was evaluated using BMI percentiles from objective height and weight measurements. Emotional wellbeing was evaluated using the emotional symptoms subscale of the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire. Trajectories were categorised as stable, improving, or declining for wellbeing; stable, obesogenic or leptogenic for weight; and compared against age-specific recommendations for sleep.
Analyses from 4157 participants (50.2% male) showed that sleep duration declined with age, falling significantly below age-specific recommendations between 8 and 14 years. Bedtimes became later and more variable between 8 and 10 years, with insomnia symptoms and delayed sleep onset common by age 14. Obesogenic or fluctuating weight trajectories were observed in 51.2% of participants. Emotional wellbeing declined notably between 10 and 14 years.
Declines in sleep and emotional wellbeing coincided with rising obesity rates between ages 10 and 12. Targeted intervention between ages 8 and 10 years offers a critical opportunity to mitigate risks of obesity, poor sleep and declining emotional wellbeing before adolescence.
儿童肥胖干预措施往往忽视睡眠和情绪健康,尽管研究表明这两者在整个儿童时期都与体重状况相关。它们共同发展的时机以及最有效的干预点仍知之甚少。本研究的目的是利用苏格兰成长队列1数据集来研究睡眠、体重状况和情绪健康的轨迹。
本研究对第1 - 10轮调查(10个月至14岁)的数据进行了二次分析。通过主要照顾者报告和自我报告评估睡眠,涵盖睡眠时间、就寝时间、睡眠碎片化、失眠症状和嗜睡情况。使用根据客观身高和体重测量得出的BMI百分位数来评估体重状况。使用优势与困难问卷的情绪症状子量表来评估情绪健康。将幸福感的轨迹分为稳定、改善或下降;体重轨迹分为稳定、致肥胖或致消瘦,并与特定年龄的睡眠建议进行比较。
对4157名参与者(50.2%为男性)的分析表明,睡眠时间随年龄下降,在8至14岁之间显著低于特定年龄的建议值。8至10岁之间就寝时间变晚且更具变异性,到14岁时失眠症状和入睡延迟很常见。51.2%的参与者出现了致肥胖或波动的体重轨迹。10至14岁之间情绪健康显著下降。
10至12岁之间睡眠和情绪健康的下降与肥胖率上升同时出现。在8至10岁之间进行有针对性的干预,为在青春期前降低肥胖、睡眠不佳和情绪健康下降的风险提供了一个关键机会。