Abstract

Abstract Introduction Multidimensional sleep health (MSH) is a population-based approach to capture the 24-hour experience of sleep by incorporating measures of nighttime sleep and daytime functioning that promote physical and mental well-being. We have updated the existing adolescent MSH model to incorporate objective and subjective sleep measures and, in the present study, examined its utility in identifying associations between MSH and behavioral and emotional well-being. Methods We studied 377 adolescents (16.4 ± 2.3 yr; 46.4% female; 21.5% racial/ethnic minority) from the Penn State Child Cohort, a randomly-selected population-based sample. Using the RU-SATED framework – regularity, satisfaction, alertness, timing, efficiency, and duration – we derived an MSH composite score based on actigraphy-measured and self-reported sleep data. We examined the associations between MSH and scores on both the adolescent version of the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) and on the Pediatric Behavior Scale (PBS). CBCL’s internalizing, externalizing, thought and attention problems scores were self-reported, while similar behavioral and emotional cluster scores on the PBS were parent-reported. Results Higher MSH scores were associated with lower thought (r=-0.21, p< 0.001), externalizing (r=-0.18, p< 0.001), attention (r=-0.16, p< 0.01) or internalizing (r=-0.12, p< 0.05) problems. Higher MSH scores were associated with lower scores on the rule-breaking (r=-0.27, p< 0.001) and aggressive (r=-0.21, p< 0.001) externalizing subscales. For the internalizing subscales, higher MSH scores were associated with lower anxious-depressed (r = -0.17, p< 0.01), withdrawn-depressed (r=-0.14, p< 0.01), and somatic complaints (r=-0.12, p< 0.05) scores. Analyses based on parent reports on the more fine-grained PBS cluster scores replicated CBCL’s associations; for example, higher MSH scores were associated with lower depression (r=-0.19, p< 0.01) and inattention (r=-0.12, p< 0.05) as observed by parents. Conclusion Optimal sleep health, when considered as a multidimensional construct, is associated with emotional well-being and better behavioral outcomes in adolescents. Our MSH model, derived from objective and subjective sleep metrics, is able to capture similar trends from self-report and parent-report measures of emotion and behavior. Support (if any) National Institutes of Health (R01HL136587, UL1TR000127)

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call