Abstract

Children and adolescents commonly suffer from sleep and circadian rhythm disturbances, which may contribute to poorer mental health and wellbeing during this critical developmental phase. Many studies however rely on self-reported sleep measures. This study assessed whether accelerometry data collection was feasible within the school setting as a method for investigating the extent of sleep and circadian disruption, and associations with subjective wellbeing, in Scotland. Fourteen days of wrist-worn accelerometry data were collected from 69 pupils, aged 10–14 years. Objective measures of sleep timing, sleep duration and circadian rest-activity patterns were derived. Questionnaires assessed subjective sleep timing, depressive symptoms, and experiences of wearing the accelerometer. Pupils slept on average less than 8 hours per night, failing to meet standard age-specific recommendations. Sleep timing was later and duration longer on weekends compared to weekdays (B = 0.87, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.70, 1.04; B = 0.49, 95% CI 0.29, 0.69), indicating social jetlag. Lower daytime activity was correlated with higher depressive symptoms (r = -0.84, p = 0.008). Compared to primary school pupils, secondary pupils had shorter sleep window duration and lower circadian relative amplitude. Over half of participants reported some discomfort/inconvenience wearing the accelerometer. These data highlight that inadequate sleep is prevalent in this sample of schoolchildren. Future, larger scale investigations will examine in more detail the associations between sleep, circadian function and physical activity with mental health and wellbeing.

Highlights

  • Sufficient high-quality sleep and robust 24 hour circadian rhythms are critical for mental and physical wellbeing [1, 2]

  • We have demonstrated the feasibility of recruiting schools and pupils to accelerometry-based research into the role of sleep in mental wellbeing: the pupil response rate and data completeness were good, with 82% of participants providing sufficient accelerometer and questionnaire data for inclusion

  • Future investigations capitalising on the Schools Health and Wellbeing Improvement Research Network (SHINE) network to recruit larger and more representative samples of schoolchildren will work to establish the factors associated with such sleep and circadian disturbances, and their impact on mental health

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Summary

Introduction

Sufficient high-quality sleep and robust 24 hour circadian rhythms (recurring patterns in behavioural and physiological processes including rest-activity patterns) are critical for mental and physical wellbeing [1, 2]. Accelerometry-assessed sleep duration and timing in late childhood and adolescence supported by a JMAS Sim Fellowship for depression research from the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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