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Published Aug 22, 2006
(Updated Dec 26, 2006)
For many children and teens, summer vacation is synonymous with staying up late and sleeping in. Returning to an early morning sleep schedule can be challenging, but it is vital to the health and successful school performance of America’s youth.
Fusion Sleep – Center for Sleep Disorders and the National Sleep Foundation (NSF) are calling on parents and students to start adjusting their sleep schedules now, in order to be well-rested and alert now that we're at the start of the school year.
According to the National Sleep Foundation’s 2004 and 2006 Sleep in America polls, children and teens overall do not get enough sleep. School-aged children get an average of 1.5 hours less than the recommended 10 to 11 hours of sleep per night on school nights, and only 20 percent of adolescents get the recommended 9 hours of sleep per night on school nights. In fact, nearly half of all adolescents sleep less than eight hours on school nights.
“Maintaining a consistent schedule, which provides for plenty of sleep, will help students adjust to the return of busy school days,” says Mary Carskadon, PhD, director of the E.P. Bradley Hospital Sleep and Chronobiology Research Lab at Brown University professor of psychiatry and human behavior at Brown Medical School. “Irregular sleep patterns negatively affect students’ biological clocks and sleep quality -- which in turn affects their ability to perform well in school and their moods.”
Tips for Getting Your Child’s Sleep Schedule Back on Track:
A lack of sleep affects all aspects of a child or teen’s life:
The National Sleep Foundation’s 2006 Sleep in America poll also shows an awareness gap among parents of adolescents. While more than half of adolescents reported not getting the sleep they need, 90% percent of parents felt that their adolescent was getting enough sleep.
Parents should know that all children – even teenagers – need more sleep than adults. For younger kids, having bedtime routines such as reading with parents can result in better and longer sleep. For older kids, having a set bedtime is associated with an increased likelihood of getting optimal sleep and a decreased likelihood of feeling too tired or sleepy during the day.
Sleep tips that will help kids start the school year off right:
Tips for Parents:
Approximately three out of every 10 children suffer from sleep disorders and require medical intervention. “Children suffering from untreated sleep disorders may be hyperactive, inattentive and chronically sleepy,” says Dr. Michael Decker, PhD, Director of Clinical Services of Fusion Sleep. “Changes in behavior often result in academic underachievement and social difficulties. Recent research shows that untreated sleep disorders in children can lead to impaired working memory, reduced levels of wakefulness, and symptoms much like that of Attention Deficit-Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD).”
For more information, please visit www.fusionsleep.com