Gave your kids smartphones for the holidays? You might want to reconsider their bedtime.
Children who slept in the same room as small screens such as smartphones got almost 21 fewer minutes of sleep a night than those who did not, according to research published yesterday by the journal Pediatrics.
The two age groups studied — about nine years old and 12 years old — also reported significantly less regular sleep with a phone nearby, possibly due to the buzz of text messages.
The paper joins a growing body of research finding that gadgets correspond to shorter, more fitful nights, as well as other health issues, such as weight gain. As one study found last month, adults who used glowing e-readers before bed had worse sleep and more drowsiness than those with printed books. The evidence suggests that bright, blinking screens are affecting our biological timekeeper, the circadian clock.
While the Pediatrics study did not conclude that phones cause sleep deprivation, its lead author, Jennifer Falbe, said the case for clamping down on kids’ screen time is gaining strength.
Recent findings “caution against unrestricted access to media in children’s bedrooms,” Falbe, a researcher at the University of California at Berkeley, said in a telephone interview. “The risks associated with shorter sleep duration and poorer sleep quality would include reduced academic performance, behavioral problems, possibly an increased risk for weight gain and possibly negative impacts on immunity.”
The human body uses light and darkness to influence circadian rhythms, the physical, mental and behavioral changes in a 24-hour cycle. The brain’s internal clock uses the amount of light to determine when to produce more melatonin, a hormone that brings on sleepiness.
Charles Czeisler, a professor of sleep medicine at Harvard Medical School, estimates that since the advent of electricity-powered light, people’s internal sleep triggers have been pushed back six hours.
The study, funded by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institutes of Health, surveyed more than 2,000 fourth and seventh-graders in Massachusetts as part of a broader investigation into obesity in children. The majority of kids surveyed slept with a small screen by their side.
The 21 minutes lost with smaller screens exceeded the 18 minutes given up by children who slept in a room with a TV. Since small devices are held closer to the face, they may delay the release of melatonin more than TV light, researchers said.
TV and video games were also associated with less sleep — 75 percent of kids in the study said they slept in a room with a TV. Each hour of TV or DVD viewing a day corresponded with almost four fewer minutes of sleep, compared with five fewer minutes for gamers.
More research is needed to determine if small screens are actually causing the lost sleep or if other forces are at play, Falbe said.
Children with smartphones and those without might be very different and may have different types of parents, she said.
Still, considering the potential long-term risks of sleep deprivation, parents should keep an eye on the time their children spend staring at screens, Falbe said.
Kids need “realistic, but firm rules around media,” she said.
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