The Catoosa County News

Teens sacrificin­g needed rest

♦ School, work, social life, social media and gaming vie for precious time.

- By April Fulton Georgia Health NEWS/NPR

Within three days of starting high school this year, my ninth-grader could not get into bed before 11 p.m. or wake up by 6 a.m. He complained he couldn’t fall asleep but felt foggy during the school day and had to reread lessons a few times at night to finish his homework. And forget morning activities on the weekends — he was in bed.

We’re not the only family struggling to get restful shut-eye.

“What parents are sharing with us is that the ‘normal life’ of a typical American high schooler is interferin­g with sleep,” says Sarah Clark, co-director of C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital National Poll on Children’s Health at the University of Michigan.

In the poll of 2,000 parents from various ethnic groups and background­s that Clark and her team published this month, 1 in 6 parents say their teen experience­s frequent sleep problems — “having trouble falling asleep or staying asleep 3 or more nights per week.”

More than half the parents say it’s because their teens won’t get off their electronic devices, and 43 percent blame irregular schedules with homework and activities.

A significan­t percentage of parents say their kids worry about school (31 percent), and 23 percent say their teens stay up worrying about their social lives.

It’s likely that the numbers of teens who have trouble sleeping is even higher than the poll of parents suggests, Clark says, because kids can hide their nighttime electronic­s use and parents may not frequently check in on older children.

How can parents help? Start with knowing what kids need.

The average American teenager gets seven hours of sleep a night, wedging it in between homework, outside activities, dinner and maybe a job. But research suggests teens need more like nine hours.

Unfortunat­ely, even their bodies work against them, says Mary Carskadon, a longtime sleep researcher and professor of psychiatry and human behavior at Brown University. As children grow into the middle and teen years, they are naturally inclined to go to bed later and sleep later in the morning. But an early school start time doesn’t allow it.

“If kids’ body clocks are shifting later and the school is starting earlier, there’s no time left to recover,” Carskadon says.

She and Clark have evidence-based tips for weary teens and their parents: Put electronic­s away and out of reach. Research has long shown that screen time interferes with good sleep because it’s stimulatin­g, and those “blue light filters” that minimize the most troublesom­e part of the spectrum won’t help much if you’re stressed out. “If I were an entreprene­ur, my get-rich-quick scheme would be the family tech lockbox,” says Carskadon. (There are already a few phone lockers in the works or on the market that may do the trick.)

Instill a regular bedtime routine. Try to turn the lights out at around the same time and wake up at the same time, even on weekends, because the evidence shows you can’t really “make up” missed sleep on the weekends. Sleep masks are useful, but avoid long naps. A 20-minute nap might be refreshing, but longer sleep sessions during the day can make it harder to get good rest at night. Limit caffeine — even more than you already do. After school, many teens grab a soda or an energy drink to power through the rest of the afternoon. But this just makes going to bed on time more difficult, which, in turn, makes the next day harder. The disruption­s add up.

Pull back on the crammed schedule. This is antithetic­al to what many parents of high school students and some students themselves think they should do to get into college. But does your teen really need to star in the school play, run for student council and be the starting quarterbac­k for the high school football team? “Pick one,” says Carskadon. Teach time management. If you don’t have four hours straight to get homework done at night, break it up into chunks. Before trying a drugstore sleep aid, talk to your doctor. The Mott survey suggests parents frequently turn to remedies like melatonin and over-the-counter drugs like Tylenol PM or Nyquil. Pursue policy changes. Most sleep scientists say it would be healthier for older children to start school later in the morning than most U.S. school districts do. “The school start time issue is very fraught,” Carskadon notes. Many teachers are fighting it, and working parents may not be able to shift their schedules.

Meanwhile, Clark and Carskadon say, the most effective thing parents can do is listen to kids — talk with them about their sleep challenges and help them set a regular schedule.

Best idea yet, parents: We can set a good example, by putting our own electronic­s away — really away — at bedtime.

Georgia Health News, a nonprofit 501(c)3 organizati­on, tracks state medical issues on its website georgiahea­lthnews.com.

 ?? / Special ?? Of parents who tell pollsters their teens have trouble sleeping, 23 percent say the kids are waking up at night worried about their social lives. A third are worried about school. All-night access to electronic devices only aggravates the problem, sleep scientists say.
/ Special Of parents who tell pollsters their teens have trouble sleeping, 23 percent say the kids are waking up at night worried about their social lives. A third are worried about school. All-night access to electronic devices only aggravates the problem, sleep scientists say.

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