Effect of Delaying High School Start Time on Teen Physical Activity, Screen Use, and Sports and Extracurricular Activity Participation: Results From START.

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Journal of School Health Pub Date : 2024-11-03 DOI:10.1111/josh.13506
Aaron T Berger, Darin J Erickson, Kayla T Johnson, Emma Billmyer, Kyla Wahlstrom, Melissa N Laska, Rachel Widome
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Abstract

Background: We aimed to characterize relationships between delayed high school start time policy, which is known to lengthen school night sleep duration, and patterns in activity outcomes: physical activity, non-school electronic screen time (non-schoolwork), and sports and extracurricular activity among adolescents.

Methods: We used data from the START study, a multi-site evaluation of a natural experiment, assessing the effects of a school start time policy change in high schools in the Minneapolis, Minnesota metropolitan area. The study follows students in 2 schools that shifted to a later start time (8:20 or 8:50 am) after baseline year and 3 schools that maintained a consistent, early start time (7:30 am) over the 3-year study period. Activity was measured by participant self-report on an in-school survey. The analysis used a difference-in-differences estimator, in which the changes in each outcome observed in the comparison schools estimate the changes in each outcome that would have been observed in the late-start adopting schools had they not delayed their start times after baseline.

Results: Over 2 years of follow-up, no changes emerged to suggest that later school start times either interfered with, or promoted, any activity-related outcome that was measured.

Implications: Communities interested in promoting sleep by delaying start times may do so knowing that there are unlikely to be adverse effects on adolescent physical activity, electronic screen time, or organized sports and activity participation.

Conclusions: A shift to later school start times does not appear to enhance or detract from the healthfulness of students' activity level.

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推迟高中开学时间对青少年体育活动、屏幕使用以及体育和课外活动参与的影响:START 的结果。
背景众所周知,推迟高中开学时间的政策会延长学生晚上的睡眠时间,我们的目的是研究推迟高中开学时间的政策与青少年体育活动、非学校电子屏幕时间(非学校作业)、体育和课外活动等活动结果之间的关系:我们使用了 START 研究的数据,该研究是一项自然实验的多地点评估,评估了明尼苏达州明尼阿波利斯大都会地区高中开学时间政策变化的影响。在为期三年的研究过程中,有两所学校的学生在基线年后改用了较晚的开学时间(上午 8:20 或 8:50),另外三所学校则一直保持较早的开学时间(上午 7:30)。活动量通过参与者在校内调查中的自我报告进行测量。分析采用了差分估算法,即比较学校中观察到的每项结果的变化,估算出采用晚开课的学校如果在基线后没有推迟开课时间,每项结果的变化:在两年的跟踪调查中,没有发现任何变化表明推迟开学时间会影响或促进任何与活动相关的测量结果:影响:有意通过推迟开学时间来促进睡眠的社区可以这样做,因为这样做不太可能对青少年的体育活动、电子屏幕时间或有组织的运动和活动参与产生不利影响:结论:推迟开学时间似乎不会提高或降低学生的健康活动水平。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of School Health
Journal of School Health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
9.10%
发文量
134
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of School Health is published 12 times a year on behalf of the American School Health Association. It addresses practice, theory, and research related to the health and well-being of school-aged youth. The journal is a top-tiered resource for professionals who work toward providing students with the programs, services, and environment they need for good health and academic success.
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