Adolescents' screen time displaces multiple sleep pathways and elevates depressive symptoms over twelve months.

PLOS global public health Pub Date : 2025-04-02 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pgph.0004262
Sebastian Hökby, Jesper Alvarsson, Joakim Westerlund, Vladimir Carli, Gergö Hadlaczky
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Abstract

Recently the Swedish Public Health Agency published recommendations of a maximum of two-to-three hours of daily leisure screen time for adolescents aged 13-18, partly to promote better sleep (2024-Sep-02). Biologically and socially, adolescence is characterized by belated sleep times, and depressive effects of screen time can arise through sleep displacements. Theorized links between screen time, sleep, and depression, merited examination of four sleep mediators to determine their relative importance and determine which of them mediate future depression. Hypotheses were preregistered. Three-wave psychometric health data were collected from healthy Swedish students (N = 4810; 51% Boys; ages 12-16; N = 55 schools; n = 20 of 26 Stockholm municipalities). Multiple imputation bias-corrected missing data. Gender-wise Structural Equation Modelling tested four sleep facets as competing mediators (quality, duration, chronotype, social jetlag). The primary model result included the three first mediators to achieve acceptable fit indices (RMSEA = 0.02; SRMR = 0.03; CFI = 0.95; TLI = 0.94). Screen time deteriorated sleep within three months and effect sizes varied between mediators (Beta weights ranged: 0.14-0.30) but less between genders. Among boys, screen time at baseline had a direct adverse effect on depression after twelve months (Beta = 0.02; p <0.038). Among girls, the depressive effect was mediated through sleep quality, duration, and chronotype (57, 38, 45% mediation). Social jetlag remained non-significant. This study supports a modernized 'screen-sleep-displacement theory'. It empirically demonstrates that screen-sleep displacements impact several aspects of sleep simultaneously. Displacements led to elevated depressive symptoms among girls but not boys. Boys may be more prone to externalizing symptoms due to sleep loss. Results could mirror potentially beneficial public health effects of national screen time recommendations.

青少年的屏幕时间取代了多种睡眠途径,并在12个月内加剧了抑郁症状。
最近,瑞典公共卫生局公布了一项建议,即 13-18 岁的青少年每天最多只能有两到三个小时的休闲屏幕时间,部分原因是为了促进更好的睡眠(2024 年 9 月-02 日)。从生物学和社会学角度来看,青春期的特点是睡眠时间推迟,而屏幕时间可能会通过睡眠错位产生抑郁效应。屏幕时间、睡眠和抑郁之间的理论联系需要对四种睡眠介导因素进行研究,以确定它们的相对重要性,并确定其中哪些因素会介导未来的抑郁。假设已预先登记。从健康的瑞典学生(人数=4810;51%为男生;年龄12-16岁;人数=55所学校;人数=斯德哥尔摩26个城市中的20个)中收集了三波心理测量健康数据。多重估算对缺失数据进行了偏差校正。性别结构方程模型测试了作为竞争中介的四个睡眠方面(质量、持续时间、时间型、社会时差)。主要模型结果包括前三个中介因素,达到可接受的拟合指数(RMSEA = 0.02;SRMR = 0.03;CFI = 0.95;TLI = 0.94)。屏幕时间会在三个月内导致睡眠质量下降,不同中介因子之间的效应大小各不相同(贝塔权重范围:0.14-0.30),但不同性别之间的效应大小较小。在男孩中,基线屏幕时间对 12 个月后的抑郁有直接的不利影响(Beta = 0.02;p
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