| Literature DB >> 29157644 |
Susan Kohl Malone1, Terra Ziporyn2, Alison M Buttenheim3.
Abstract
Healthy People 2020 established a national objective to increase the proportion of 9th-to-12th-grade students reporting sufficient sleep. A salient approach for achieving this objective is to delay middle and high school start times. Despite decades of research supporting the benefits of delayed school start times on adolescent sleep, health, and well-being, progress has been slow. Accelerating progress will require new approaches incorporating strategies that influence how school policy decisions are made. In this commentary, we introduce four strategies that influence decision-making processes and demonstrate how they can be applied to efforts aimed at changing school start time policies.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; Behavioral economics; Policy change; School start times; Sleep
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29157644 PMCID: PMC5728679 DOI: 10.1016/j.sleh.2017.07.012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sleep Health ISSN: 2352-7218