Abstract

BackgroundThe purpose of this study was to investigate whether there is a bi-directional relationship between sleep characteristics (time in bed, sleep duration, sleep chronology, and sleep efficiency) and time spent participating in outdoor active play among children.MethodsParticipants consisted of 433 children aged 10–13 years from Kingston, ON, Canada. Time in bed, sleep duration, sleep chronology, and sleep efficiency were measured for 8 consecutive nights using data from a sleep log and Actical accelerometer. Outdoor active play was measured for the 7 days that fell in between these 8 nights using a combination of data from accelerometers, global positioning system loggers, and geographic information systems. Generalized estimating equation models were used to assess the relationships between sleep characteristics and outdoor active play. These models accounted for the repeated measures nested within participants and adjusted for several confounders (e.g., age, sex, family income, neighborhood traffic and green space).ResultsTime in bed, sleep duration, sleep chronology, and sleep efficiency were not significantly associated with the following day’s outdoor active play. There was a significant (p = 0.017) association between outdoor active play and the following night’s time in bed, which suggested that each hour increase in outdoor active play was associated with a 4.0 min increase in time in bed. Outdoor active play was not significantly associated with sleep duration, sleep chronology, or sleep efficiency.ConclusionsNone of the sleep characteristics predicted the following day’s outdoor active play. Increase time spent in outdoor active play predicted a longer time in bed, but not sleep duration, sleep chronology, or sleep efficiency.

Highlights

  • The purpose of this study was to investigate whether there is a bi-directional relationship between sleep characteristics and time spent participating in outdoor active play among children

  • Observational studies looking at the relationship between sleep and physical activity have captured the total time spent in all types of physical activity

  • This study examined whether sleep characteristics at night was associated with the amount of Outdoor active play (OAP) accumulated the following day, and whether OAP accumulated during the day was associated with sleep characteristics the following night

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Summary

Introduction

The purpose of this study was to investigate whether there is a bi-directional relationship between sleep characteristics (time in bed, sleep duration, sleep chronology, and sleep efficiency) and time spent participating in outdoor active play among children. Studies have reported that physical activity during the day positively [15, 16, 18,19,20], negatively [15], or does not [16, 17, 19, 21] predict the subsequent night’s sleep duration and quality. These inconsistencies may in part reflect the lack of specificity of the physical activity variables being examined. OAP, an unscheduled activity, may benefit sleep because it is associated with factors associated with contributing to a peaceful sleep at night [24,25,26]

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