Childhood sleep is prospectively associated with adolescent alcohol and marijuana use

IF 3.3 3区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Annals of Epidemiology Pub Date : 2024-07-21 DOI:10.1016/j.annepidem.2024.07.048
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Abstract

Introduction

Prior studies have examined the cross-sectional relationship between adolescent sleep and substance use; however, fewer have explored the long-term connections between childhood sleep and adolescent substance use.

Methods

This study investigated both cross-sectional associations during adolescence and prospective associations between childhood weeknight sleep and later alcohol and marijuana use in the Future of Families and Child Wellbeing Study, a diverse national birth cohort of urban children from 20 cities with populations greater than 200,000. Parents reported their child’s bedtime at ages 3, 5, and 9 and their child’s sleep duration at ages 5 and 9.

Results

At age 15, adolescents self-reported their bedtime, sleep duration, and alcohol and marijuana use (n = 1514). Logistic regression analyses for each substance use outcome at age 15 were adjusted for sex, age at time of assessment, race/ethnicity, income-relative-to-poverty threshold, family structure, and caregiver education level. At age 15, later bedtime (AOR=1.39; 95 % CI=1.22, 1.57) and shorter sleep duration (AOR=1.28; 95 % CI=1.14, 1.43) were associated with greater odds of consuming a full drink of alcohol more than once, and later bedtime was associated with greater odds of trying marijuana (AOR=1.35; 95 % CI=1.20, 1.51). Unexpectedly, later bedtimes at age 3 were associated with lower odds of drinking alcohol by age 15 (AOR=0.74; 95 % CI=0.59, 0.92). In contrast, later bedtimes at age 9 were associated with greater odds of drinking alcohol (AOR=1.45; 95 % CI=1.11, 1.90). Additionally, later bedtime at age 5 (AOR=1.26; 95 % CI=1.01, 1.58) and shorter sleep duration at age 9 (AOR=1.19; 95 % CI=1.04, 1.36) were associated with greater odds of trying marijuana. Conclusion: Taken together, these associations support the importance of protecting childhood sleep habits to reduce the likelihood of substance use starting as early as mid-adolescence.

Implications and contribution

In this longitudinal cohort study, adolescents were more likely to have consumed alcohol or tried marijuana by age 15 if they had later bedtimes and shorter sleep duration during childhood and adolescence. Protecting sleep health throughout childhood may reduce the likelihood of substance use during early adolescence.

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儿童时期的睡眠与青少年酗酒和吸食大麻有关。
引言先前的研究已经探讨了青少年睡眠与药物使用之间的横断面关系;然而,探讨儿童睡眠与青少年药物使用之间长期关系的研究较少:这项研究调查了 "家庭未来与儿童福祉研究"(Future of Families and Child Wellbeing Study)中青少年时期的横断面关系以及儿童时期夜间睡眠与日后使用酒精和大麻之间的前瞻性关系。父母报告了孩子 3 岁、5 岁和 9 岁时的就寝时间,以及孩子 5 岁和 9 岁时的睡眠时间:15 岁的青少年自我报告了他们的就寝时间、睡眠时间以及酒精和大麻的使用情况(n=1,514)。对 15 岁时每种药物使用结果的逻辑回归分析都根据性别、评估时的年龄、种族/民族、收入相对于贫困线、家庭结构和照顾者的教育水平进行了调整。在 15 岁时,较晚的就寝时间(AOR=1.39;95% CI=1.22,1.57)和较短的睡眠时间(AOR=1.28;95% CI=1.14,1.43)与较高的饮酒一次以上的几率有关,较晚的就寝时间与较高的尝试吸食大麻的几率有关(AOR=1.35;95% CI=1.20,1.51)。意想不到的是,3 岁时晚睡与 15 岁时饮酒的几率较低有关(AOR=0.74;95% CI=0.59,0.92)。相反,9 岁时晚睡与饮酒几率增加有关(AOR=1.45;95% CI=1.11,1.90)。此外,5 岁时较晚的就寝时间(AOR=1.26;95% CI=1.01,1.58)和 9 岁时较短的睡眠时间(AOR=1.19;95% CI=1.04,1.36)与尝试吸食大麻的几率较大有关:总之,这些关联支持保护儿童睡眠习惯的重要性,以减少早在青春期中期就开始使用药物的可能性:在这项纵向队列研究中,如果青少年在童年和青春期的就寝时间较晚、睡眠时间较短,那么他们到 15 岁时更有可能饮酒或尝试吸食大麻。在整个童年期保护睡眠健康可降低青少年早期使用药物的可能性。
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来源期刊
Annals of Epidemiology
Annals of Epidemiology 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
1.80%
发文量
207
审稿时长
59 days
期刊介绍: The journal emphasizes the application of epidemiologic methods to issues that affect the distribution and determinants of human illness in diverse contexts. Its primary focus is on chronic and acute conditions of diverse etiologies and of major importance to clinical medicine, public health, and health care delivery.
期刊最新文献
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