0266 Objective Sleep Duration During the School-Aged Years: Comparisons with Published Guidelines and Normative Values

SLEEP(2018)

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Abstract
Overall sleep need changes throughout childhood and adolescence. The most widely-cited studies providing normative sleep duration data in children have relied on subjective reports, yet objective sleep measures often produce discordant sleep parameters compared to subjective measures. The current study compared actigraphy-derived sleep duration in a large sample of youth ages 7 to 16 years to published sleep norms (Iglowstein et al., 2003). The percentage of youth at each age meeting the National Sleep Foundation’s (NSF) recommended sleep amounts was also examined. A sample of 250 youth (M = 11.05, SD = 2.76) recruited from the community in 3 U.S. cities participated. All youth wore actigraphs for one week at home as part of a larger assessment. When examined according to one-year age bands, results showed youth of all ages were sleeping significantly less than previously published on subjective reports (p’s
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Key words
objective sleep duration,school-aged
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