| Literature DB >> 31840167 |
Eva C Winnebeck1, Maria T Vuori-Brodowski1, Anna M Biller1, Carmen Molenda1, Dorothee Fischer2,3,4, Giulia Zerbini1, Till Roenneberg1.
Abstract
Sleep deprivation in teenage students is pervasive and a public health concern, but evidence is accumulating that delaying school start times may be an effective countermeasure. Most studies so far assessed static changes in schools start time, using cross-sectional comparisons and one-off sleep measures. When a high school in Germany introduced flexible start times for their senior students-allowing them to choose daily between an 8 am or 9 am start (≥08:50)-we monitored students' sleep longitudinally using subjective and objective measures. Students (10-12th grade, 14-19 y) were followed 3 weeks prior and 6 weeks into the flexible system via daily sleep diaries (n = 65) and a subcohort via continuous wrist-actimetry (n = 37). Satisfaction and perceived cognitive outcomes were surveyed at study end. Comparisons between 8 am and ≥9 am-starts within the flexible system demonstrated that students slept 1.1 h longer when starting school later-independent of gender, grade, chronotype, and frequency of later starts; sleep offsets were delayed but, importantly, onsets remained unchanged. Sleep quality was increased and alarm-driven waking reduced. However, overall sleep duration in the flexible system was not extended compared to baseline-likely because students did not start later frequently enough. Nonetheless, students were highly satisfied with the flexible system and reported cognitive and sleep improvements. Therefore, flexible systems may present a viable alternative for implementing later school starts to improve teenage sleep if students can be encouraged to use the late-option frequently enough. Flexibility may increase acceptance of school start changes and speculatively even prevent delays in sleep onsets through occasional early starts. © Sleep Research Society 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Sleep Research Society. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail journals.permissions@oup.com.Entities:
Keywords: adolescence; school start time; secondary school; sleep
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31840167 DOI: 10.1093/sleep/zsz307
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sleep ISSN: 0161-8105 Impact factor: 5.849