skip to main |
skip to sidebar
Pushing back school start times by just 30 minutes each day can improve alertness, mood and health in adolescents, according to a study published in JAMA's Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine.
"Ranging from the amount of sleep they were getting, to self-reported sleepiness, to self-reported depressed mood to tardiness, the study demonstrates you can make a positive impact with relatively small change in start time, " said lead study author Dr. Judith A. Owens, director of the pediatric sleep disorder center at Hasbro Children’s Hospital in Providence, Rhode Island.
According to the National Sleep Foundation (NSF), most adolescents experience biological changes to their internal clocks during this transition from childhood to adulthood. Those changes often cause them to fall asleep later. When those young people must awake early for school, they don't get the 8.5 to 9.25 hours of sleep their bodies need.
In addition, a 2006 poll by the NSF found that nearly one-half of adolescents in America were getting less than eight hours of sleep, and many reported that they were aware they were getting less sleep than they needed to feel their best.
In the current study, researchers looked at just over 200 students in grades nine-12 at a private school. The students took a survey, both before and after the school start time was changed from 8 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. to find out about sleep-related problems and both sleep and wake behaviors.
Overall, the number of students who reported feeling unhappy, depressed, annoyed or irritated decreased. Also, fewer found themselves at the health center for fatigue-related concerns.
"If you really need nine hours, and you're only getting six and a half hours or seven hours, even that extra half-hour can make a big difference," Owens said. She says future studies should include looking at academic performance.
"There are a lot of schools around the country at least contemplating doing this. I think it would be very important for these schools to make an effort to systematically examine the impact- whether that's positive or negative, because we need to have the data to show to schools who are thinking about doing this, because it's not a trivial challenge from an operational standpoint. There are a lot of issues to be resolved. We need to have strong enough evidence that it has a positive beneficial effect in order to recommend this- that other schools do the same thing," she added.
Owens noted that the school in the study did not go back to their 8 a.m. start time, as originally intended.
Saturday, July 10, 2010
Small delay in school start times=big benefits
Pushing back school start times by just 30 minutes each day can improve alertness, mood and health in adolescents, according to a study published in JAMA's Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine.
"Ranging from the amount of sleep they were getting, to self-reported sleepiness, to self-reported depressed mood to tardiness, the study demonstrates you can make a positive impact with relatively small change in start time, " said lead study author Dr. Judith A. Owens, director of the pediatric sleep disorder center at Hasbro Children’s Hospital in Providence, Rhode Island.
According to the National Sleep Foundation (NSF), most adolescents experience biological changes to their internal clocks during this transition from childhood to adulthood. Those changes often cause them to fall asleep later. When those young people must awake early for school, they don't get the 8.5 to 9.25 hours of sleep their bodies need.
In addition, a 2006 poll by the NSF found that nearly one-half of adolescents in America were getting less than eight hours of sleep, and many reported that they were aware they were getting less sleep than they needed to feel their best.
In the current study, researchers looked at just over 200 students in grades nine-12 at a private school. The students took a survey, both before and after the school start time was changed from 8 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. to find out about sleep-related problems and both sleep and wake behaviors.
Overall, the number of students who reported feeling unhappy, depressed, annoyed or irritated decreased. Also, fewer found themselves at the health center for fatigue-related concerns.
"If you really need nine hours, and you're only getting six and a half hours or seven hours, even that extra half-hour can make a big difference," Owens said. She says future studies should include looking at academic performance.
"There are a lot of schools around the country at least contemplating doing this. I think it would be very important for these schools to make an effort to systematically examine the impact- whether that's positive or negative, because we need to have the data to show to schools who are thinking about doing this, because it's not a trivial challenge from an operational standpoint. There are a lot of issues to be resolved. We need to have strong enough evidence that it has a positive beneficial effect in order to recommend this- that other schools do the same thing," she added.
Owens noted that the school in the study did not go back to their 8 a.m. start time, as originally intended.
About Me
- Nairuz
- Hi Everyone This a blog about different, amazing, weird and valuable news around the worlds that I gather from many of places to enlighten our knowledge and follow the fast paces of the world.
Total Pageviews
Labels
- Advices (4)
- Amazing (1)
- Amazing Bridges (3)
- Animals (11)
- Animals World (1)
- Art (2)
- Articles (5)
- Biology (2)
- Birds (4)
- Breakthroughs (1)
- Cars (1)
- Celebrations (2)
- Cell phones (2)
- Cheetah Family (1)
- Comments (1)
- Computers (1)
- Congress (1)
- Countries (1)
- Culture (1)
- Customs (1)
- Deer (1)
- Designs (4)
- Did you Know (40)
- Diet (17)
- Education (5)
- Electronics (4)
- Entertainment (38)
- Entertainment.jokes (2)
- Environment (11)
- Exercise (1)
- Facts (71)
- Facts about World Cup (1)
- Fish (1)
- Food (20)
- Forests (1)
- Friendship (1)
- Fuji (1)
- Gadgets (1)
- General News (33)
- Governments (1)
- Health (57)
- History (4)
- Holidays (2)
- Insects (2)
- Internet (4)
- Japan (1)
- Jungle (1)
- l News (3)
- Leisure (2)
- Life (22)
- Love (1)
- Medicine (5)
- Mount (1)
- News (18)
- Nutrients (1)
- Occasions (3)
- ODD (18)
- p (1)
- People (1)
- Photos (9)
- Politics (3)
- Psychology (6)
- Questions (6)
- Quotation of the Day (15)
- Quotation of the Day.Creativity (6)
- Religions (1)
- Remedies (2)
- Richest (1)
- Rituals (2)
- Science (101)
- Sea World (2)
- Sepcial Stories (20)
- Sepcials (34)
- Socials (3)
- Space (3)
- Special Places (2)
- Special Stories (3)
- Specials (53)
- Sport (1)
- Sports (7)
- Tech (13)
- Tigers (1)
- Tops (1)
- Travel (2)
- Weird (5)
- Weird Customs (1)
- Weird News (10)
- Wise Quotation (10)
- World Cup (3)
- World Facts (3)
Popular Posts
-
By Jen Drake, eHow Contributing Writer Bovinae is a scientific classification for a specific subfamily of mammals that includes cows, oxen...
-
1-Stockholm Tunnelbana (Sweden) `Subway stations are usually designed in a clean and modernistic style in order to make people forget they...
-
In a perfect world, everyone would work out enough and eat right all the time. But that's not always possible, so we turned to the expe...
-
Birds daub pink-producing oil onto feathers during mating season. There's a reason why flamingos are so pretty in pink: The birds ap...
-
Trying to get more shut-eye? Take a look at your diet. Eating the right foods in the hours before you hit the hay may help you fall asleep ...
Blog Archive
Visitors
Hits
Followers
Powered by Blogger.
by : arab-alrab7on
My Blog List
-
-
This Turkish Ice Cream Man Is the Ultimate Prankster - Imagine a world where buying ice cream isn’t just about preparing to eat a delicious frozen treat, but also about the ice cream man pulling entertaining...10 years ago
-
0 comments:
Post a Comment