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American Teenagers Dangerously Sleep Deprived

Tired teens physically, mentally, emotionally compromised

Julie Taboh | Washington, DC09 September 2010

Photo: www.jupiterimages.com/Photos.com

Most American teenagers are missing up to 1 hours of sleep every school night.

About 50 percent of American teenagers are not getting the sleep they need during the
school year, according to a poll by the National Sleep Foundation.

Experts say that teens are biologically programmed to go to sleep later and get up later than
other age groups, which makes their body's natural rhythm incompatible with early school
hours. And this sleep deficit is having negative consequences on almost all facets of teens'
lives.

Now, an increasing number of educators are trying to reconcile the sleep needs of their
teenage students with the practical realities of earlier school schedules.

Sixteen-year-old Danny is also part of a growing number of teenagers who are sleep
deprived.

Dozing at their desks

Sixteen-year-old Danny is a typically active teenager. He plays lacrosse and football and
likes listening to rock music. But Danny is also part of a growing number of teenagers who
are sleep deprived.
"Getting up in the morning is pretty terrible," he says. "I'm just very out of it and tired. And
then, going to school, I'm out of it. And through first and second period [classes], I can
barely stay awake."

Danny is not alone. Surveys show that half of all teenagers in the country are missing an
average of one to 1 hours of sleep every school night, and that's having negative
consequences on their performance - in and out of the classroom.

While some believe that a teenager's reluctance to get up in the morning is sheer laziness,
sleep experts say that's not necessarily the case. Michael Breus, a clinical psychologist who
specializes in sleep disorders, says kids like Danny aren't just a bunch of lazy kids.

"These are children whose biological rhythms, more times than not, are off," says Breus.

Negative consequences

Teenager's biological rhythms - often referred to as their circadian rhythms - favor later
bedtimes and later wake-up times.

But, with many school systems starting classes as early as seven a.m., teenagers like Danny
often come to school half asleep. And that, says Breus, has consequences.

"We have long known that the more sleep deprived you are, the more cranky you are. So
when your child, who really needs eight or nine hours, is only sleeping for seven hours a
night, they are going to experience a form of depression that could be significant and could
have some pretty major effects on their overall well-being."

According to Breus, that mood-altering deficit can affect a teen's academic performance,
their athletic ability and even their performance behind the wheel of a car.

"We know that drowsy driving is of utmost concern because these are kids who haven't had
a tremendous amount of experience in driving to begin with." Any drowsy driver is
dangerous, says Breus, but a teenager with a lack of experience can be even more
dangerous.

He acknowledges that there are other factors that contribute to a teenager's sleep loss.
Twenty-four-hour access to the Internet and fast-paced video games are tempting products
in the digital age. And the proliferation of caffeinated drinks is also wreaking havoc with
our children's natural body rhythms. But school, says Breus, is one area where small
changes can bring about dramatic results.

"There've been multiple research studies that now show that in fact when you change the
school start time, allowing children to start later in the morning, their grades go up by
almost a full letter grade in their first- and second-period (classes)," he says.
Headmaster Eric Peterson of St. George's School in Newport, Rhode Island, saw positive
results after changing his school start time from 8:00 to 8:30 am.

Later school start time equals happier, healthier teens

Dozens of school districts around the country have been looking at these studies and are
considering ways to adjust their class schedules.

Eric Peterson is head of St. George's School, a private boarding school for grades 9-12 in
the northeastern state of Rhode Island.

After looking at the medical research on adolescent sleep needs and observing students in
his own school, Peterson consulted with Dr. Judy Owen, a renowned pediatrician and sleep
expert.

Armed with what he considered to be compelling data, Peterson decided to change his
school's start time from 8:00 am to 8:30 am on a trial basis to see if a 30-minute change
would make a difference. He was surprised by the results.

"What was really astonishing was how many benefits and how significant the benefits
were," he says. "In the research itself, we saw just over a 50 decrease in health-center
admissions for fatigue, or fatigue-related illness, or rest requests. We saw almost 35 percent
decrease in first-period tardiness. Students reported that they were more alert. They were
less sleepy during the day."

And, according to Dr. Patricia Moss, assistant dean for Academic Affairs at St. George's
School, students weren't the only ones reporting better results in the classroom. She says
virtually all the teachers almost immediately noticed much more alertness in the classroom,
and there was definitely a more positive mood all around.

"Kids were happier to be there at 8:30 than they were at 8:00," she says. "So our experience
across the total spectrum was, universally, extremely positive and surprisingly so."

Headmaster Peterson says there was another unexpected area of change when the school
changed its start time.

"We saw probably a greater than 30 percent increase in student attendance at breakfast, and
of the food that they were eating. We more than doubled the amount of milk, eggs, fruit and
cereal. So it was quality breakfast foods that the kids were eating. So they were better
fueled as well as better rested."

Ross and Peterson acknowledge that making schedule changes has been easier at a small,
private boarding school than it might be for the larger U.S. public school system. But they
are hopeful that others will find a way.
"In the end," says Peterson, "schools ought to do what's the right thing for their students,
first and foremost, and this element of the program is very clear - certainly for us as a
school - but I think as a general example to other schools, is pretty compelling, and so I
would argue that it's worth doing."

Whether or how a school or a school district is able to do it, he says, or finds the will and
skill to accomplish it, "that's the job of talented, smart school administrators," he says.

In the meantime, experts say that - as we learn more about adolescent sleep patterns and
exactly why they need those nine hours of sleep - it is up to families and individual students
like Danny to take personal responsibility for paying more attention to sleep as an essential
element of a healthy life.

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