School start times and racial disparities in early adolescent sleep.

IF 3.4 2区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Tiffany Yip, Jinjin Yan, Meng-Run Zhang, Yijie Wang, Zhenqiang Zhao, Heining Cham, Margarita Alegría
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objectives: Many communities in the United States are delaying school start times to improve youth sleep. Racial disparities exist in sleep. The extent to which school start times are associated with racial disparities in sleep is unclear, especially in early adolescent populations that are not the focus of research on school start times. This study examined the associations between school start times and actigraphy-assessed sleep, including duration, onset, and offset times among a national sample of racially diverse early adolescents.

Methods: In a national sample of 3522 early adolescents (Mage = 11.49, SDage = 0.50; 2123 (60.3%) non-Hispanic White, 316 (8.7%) Black or African American, 768 (21.6%) Hispanic or Latinx American, 104 (2.9%) Asian American, 110 (3.0%) White-Black biracial, and 125 (3.5%) White-Asian biracial) in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study, links between school start times and sleep duration, onset, and offset times (mean levels, variability) were estimated by racialized groups, accounting for covariates.

Results: Later school start times were associated with longer weekday and weekend sleep duration, later onset, and later offset (βs = 0.087 -0.145, ps < .005) among White early adolescents. Among Latinx early adolescents, the association between school start times and weekday sleep duration was weaker compared with White adolescents (b = -0.088, SE = 0.029, p = .03). School start times were unrelated to sleep duration for other racially minoritized early adolescents (βs = -0.124 to 0.124).

Conclusions: The benefits of later school start times for sleep duration were only evidenced for White early adolescents. This study highlights the value of including school start times as a determinant of sleep health equity.

学校开学时间和青少年早期睡眠的种族差异。
目的:美国的许多社区正在推迟上学时间,以改善青少年的睡眠。种族差异存在于睡眠中。学校上课时间与种族间睡眠差异的关联程度尚不清楚,尤其是在青少年早期人群中,他们不是学校上课时间研究的重点。这项研究调查了学校开学时间和活动记录仪评估的睡眠之间的关系,包括持续时间、开始时间和抵消时间,研究对象是全国不同种族的早期青少年。方法:全国3522例早期青少年样本(Mage = 11.49, SDage = 0.50;在青少年大脑认知发展(ABCD)研究中,2123名(60.3%)非西班牙裔白人,316名(8.7%)黑人或非洲裔美国人,768名(21.6%)西班牙裔或拉丁裔美国人,104名(2.9%)亚裔美国人,110名(3.0%)白人-黑人混血儿,125名(3.5%)白人-亚洲混血儿),通过种族化组估计学校开始时间与睡眠持续时间、发病和偏移时间(平均水平,变异性)之间的联系,考虑协变量。结果:在白人早期青少年中,较晚的上学时间与较长的工作日和周末睡眠时间、较晚的发病时间和较晚的偏移时间相关(βs = 0.087 -0.145, ps < 0.005)。在拉丁裔早期青少年中,上学时间与工作日睡眠时间的相关性较白人青少年弱(b = -0.088, SE = 0.029, p = 0.03)。其他少数族裔早期青少年的上学时间与睡眠时间无关(βs = -0.124 ~ 0.124)。结论:推迟上学时间对睡眠时间的好处仅在白人早期青少年中得到证实。这项研究强调了将上学时间作为睡眠健康公平的决定因素的价值。
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来源期刊
Sleep Health
Sleep Health CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
9.80%
发文量
114
审稿时长
54 days
期刊介绍: Sleep Health Journal of the National Sleep Foundation is a multidisciplinary journal that explores sleep''s role in population health and elucidates the social science perspective on sleep and health. Aligned with the National Sleep Foundation''s global authoritative, evidence-based voice for sleep health, the journal serves as the foremost publication for manuscripts that advance the sleep health of all members of society.The scope of the journal extends across diverse sleep-related fields, including anthropology, education, health services research, human development, international health, law, mental health, nursing, nutrition, psychology, public health, public policy, fatigue management, transportation, social work, and sociology. The journal welcomes original research articles, review articles, brief reports, special articles, letters to the editor, editorials, and commentaries.
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