Sleep improvements on days with later school starts persist after 1 year in a flexible start system

被引:10
作者
Biller, Anna M. [1 ,2 ,5 ]
Molenda, Carmen [1 ]
Zerbini, Giulia [1 ,3 ]
Roenneberg, Till [1 ,6 ]
Winnebeck, Eva C. [1 ,4 ,7 ,8 ]
机构
[1] Ludwig Maximilian Univ Munich, Inst Med Psychol, Munich, Germany
[2] Ludwig Maximilian Univ Munich, Grad Sch Syst Neurosci, Munich, Germany
[3] Univ Augsburg, Dept Med Psychol & Sociol, Augsburg, Germany
[4] Helmholtz Ctr Munich, Inst Neurogen, Ingolstadter Landstr 1, Neuherberg, Germany
[5] Bundeswehr Univ Munich, Inst Psychol, Munich, Germany
[6] Ludwig Maximilian Univ Munich, Inst & Polyclin Occupat Social & Environm Med, Munich, Germany
[7] Tech Univ Munich, Fac Med, Chair Neurogenet, Munich, Germany
[8] Helmholtz Ctr Munich, Inst Neurogen, Munich, Germany
关键词
ADOLESCENT SLEEP; SOCIAL JETLAG; TIME; DURATION; IMPACT; MOOD; ASSOCIATION; BEHAVIOR; OUTCOMES; OBESITY;
D O I
10.1038/s41598-022-06209-4
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Early school times fundamentally clash with the late sleep of teenagers. This mismatch results in chronic sleep deprivation posing acute and long-term health risks and impairing students' learning. Despite immediate short-term benefits for sleep, the long-term effects of later starts remain unresolved. In a pre-post design over 1 year, we studied a unique flexible school start system, in which 10-12th grade students chose daily between an 8:00 or 8:50AM-start. Missed study time (8:00-8:50) was compensated for during gap periods or after classes. Based on 2 waves (6-9 weeks of sleep diary each), we found that students maintained their similar to 1-h-sleep gain on later days, longitudinally (n = 28) and cross-sectionally (n = 79). This gain was independent of chronotype and frequency of later starts but attenuated for boys after 1 year. Students showed persistently better sleep quality and reduced alarm-driven waking and reported psychological benefits (n = 93) like improved motivation, concentration, and study quality on later days. Nonetheless, students chose later starts only infrequently (median 2 days/week), precluding detectable sleep extensions in the flexible system overall. Reasons for not choosing late starts were the need to make up lost study time, preference for extra study time and transport issues. Whether flexible systems constitute an appealing alternative to fixed delays given possible circadian and psychological advantages warrants further investigation.
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页数:14
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