A composite measure of sleep health predicts concurrent mental and physical health outcomes in adolescents prone to eveningness

Sleep health can be characterized using multiple dimensions, including regularity, satisfaction, alertness, timing, efficiency, and duration. This study provides a preliminary derivation of a Sleep Health Composite score in adolescents with eveningness chronotype and examined its associations with m...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sleep health 2019-04, Vol.5 (2), p.166-174
Hauptverfasser: Dong, Lu, Martinez, Armando J., Buysse, Daniel J., Harvey, Allison G.
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container_end_page 174
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container_title Sleep health
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creator Dong, Lu
Martinez, Armando J.
Buysse, Daniel J.
Harvey, Allison G.
description Sleep health can be characterized using multiple dimensions, including regularity, satisfaction, alertness, timing, efficiency, and duration. This study provides a preliminary derivation of a Sleep Health Composite score in adolescents with eveningness chronotype and examined its associations with mental and physical health outcomes. Participants were 176 adolescents (mean age 14.77 years, 58% female) who participated in a randomized controlled trial examining the Transdiagnostic Sleep and Circadian intervention. At study entry, the sample was characterized by evening circadian preference, later bedtime, and increased risk in 1 of 5 health domains (emotional, cognitive, behavioral, social, and physical). The Sleep Health Composite was derived using 7-day sleep diary and self-report rating scales. Each dimension was categorized as “good” or “poor” using cut-offs informed by prior studies and expert consensus. Mental and physical health outcomes were assessed using self-report rating scales, semistructured clinical interviews, parent report, or biometric measurement. Sleep duration and satisfaction dimensions were most commonly rated as poor. Greater sleep health, as indexed by greater Sleep Health Composite score, was concurrently associated with lower risk in emotional, cognitive, and social domains, as well as fewer physical symptoms and reduced odds for obesity and current mood or anxiety disorders. Sleep health is an important correlate of mental and physical health outcomes in adolescents. The Sleep Health Composite has potential application as an outcome measure in treatment studies of sleep and circadian problems.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.sleh.2018.11.009
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subjects Adolescent
Adolescents
Anxiety
Anxiety Disorders - epidemiology
Circadian Rhythm
Depression
Evening circadian preference
Female
Humans
Male
Mood Disorders - epidemiology
Obesity
Pediatric Obesity - epidemiology
Risk Factors
Self Report
Sleep
Sleep health
Time Factors
title A composite measure of sleep health predicts concurrent mental and physical health outcomes in adolescents prone to eveningness
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