Sleep Shortage Takes Toll on Middle Schoolers
Feelings of depression and low self-esteem plague children as they advance
through middle school because they get increasingly less sleep, according
to a new study completed by UMass Boston psychology professor Jean Rhodes,
PhD.
"Sleep clearly played a significant role in predicting depressive
symptoms and self-esteem during adolescence," says Rhodes.
The research appears in the January-February issue of Child Development.
Attempts to improve the health, quality of life and academic careers of
adolescents should consider the importance of a good night's sleep, she
says. A grant from the Spencer Foundation supported the study.
"Elevated levels of depression and drops in self-esteem are seen
as inevitable hallmarks of adolescence," says Rhodes. "Yet these
results suggest that such changes are partially linked to a variable --
sleep -- that is largely under individual, parental and even school control."
The students were asked about the number of hours they slept each night
and what grades they received in school. They also answered questionnaires
designed to measure depressive symptoms and assess self-worth.
Rhodes and her colleagues found that students who slept fewer hours in
the sixth grade had lower self-esteem, higher levels of depressive symptoms
and worse grades than students who got more sleep. During the three years
of middle school, they also found a steady decline in the average hours
of sleep, which apparently led to declines in self-esteem and grades and
a rise in depressive symptoms.
Girls had a harder time than boys in getting enough sleep, she says.
They got more sleep than boys as they started middle school, possibly
because girls enter puberty earlier, creating a greater need for sleep.
Levels of sleep dropped for both boys and girls over time, but the decline
was steeper for girls, she says.
On average, boys and girls went to bed at the same time. But girls woke
up earlier, which other researchers have attributed to longer morning
grooming times or a greater burden of household chores compared to boys.
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