Sleep duration, schedule and quality among urban Chinese children and adolescents: associations with routine after-school activities

PLoS One. 2015 Jan 22;10(1):e0115326. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0115326. eCollection 2015.

Abstract

Background: With rapid urbanization accompanied by lifestyle changes, children and adolescents living in metropolitan areas are faced with many time use choices that compete with sleep. This study reports on the sleep hygiene of urban Chinese school students, and investigates the relationship between habitual after-school activities and sleep duration, schedule and quality on a regular school day.

Methods: Cross-sectional, school-based survey of school children (Grades 4-8) living in Shanghai, China, conducted in 2011. Self-reported data were collected on students' sleep duration and timing, sleep quality, habitual after-school activities (i.e. homework, leisure-time physical activity, recreational screen time and school commuting time), and potential correlates.

Results: Mean sleep duration of this sample (mean age: 11.5-years; 48.6% girls) was 9 hours. Nearly 30% of students reported daytime tiredness. On school nights, girls slept less (p<0.001) and went to bed later (p<0.001), a sex difference that was more pronounced in older students. Age by sex interactions were observed for both sleep duration (p=0.005) and bedtime (p=0.002). Prolonged time spent on homework and mobile phone playing was related to shorter sleep duration and later bedtime. Adjusting for all other factors, with each additional hour of mobile phone playing, the odds of daytime tiredness and having difficulty maintaining sleep increased by 30% and 27% among secondary students, respectively.

Conclusion: There are sex differences in sleep duration, schedule and quality. Habitual activities had small but significant associations with sleep hygiene outcomes especially among secondary school students. Intervention strategies such as limiting children's use of electronic screen devices after school are implicated.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Child
  • China
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Motor Activity
  • Recreation
  • Sex Characteristics
  • Sleep*
  • Urban Population*
  • Work

Grants and funding

The study is mainly funded by the Shanghai Municipal Committee of Education and also sponsored by Shanghai Municipal Health Bureau (Award Number: 12GWZX0301). The authors also thank the China Scholarship Council (CSC) for funding Xiaoxiao Jiang’s doctoral scholarship in joint-PhD program with University of Sydney and this analysis, which is part of the requirements for her PhD studies. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.