| Literature DB >> 16753945 |
Alexandru Gaina1, Michikazu Sekine, Hitomi Kanayama, Yamagami Takashi, Lizhen Hu, Kayo Sengoku, Sadanobu Kagamimori.
Abstract
We surveyed the sleep-wake patterns and lifestyle habits in a sample of Japanese first to third year junior high school children (n=638, age 12 to 15 yrs), of whom 29.3% were evening type, 64.1% intermediate type, and 6.6% morning type in preference. The morningness-eveningness (M-E) score was lower (more evening typed), 16.1 vs. 15.4 in first compared to third year students. There were significant gender differences, with girls showing a greater evening preference. Evening preference was associated with longer sleep latency, shortened sleep duration during schooldays and weekends, bad morning feeling, and episodes of daytime sleepiness. In contrast, morning preference was associated with higher sleep drive and better sleep-wake parameters and lifestyle habits. Our results suggest the morning preference should be promoted among junior high school children to increase the likelihood of more regular sleep-wake patterns and lifestyle habits.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16753945 DOI: 10.1080/07420520600650646
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chronobiol Int ISSN: 0742-0528 Impact factor: 2.877