Welcome
English
Share
Health
Study Shows Video Gaming Teens Sleep Less
Teens who play a lot of video games are likely to sleep less than the eight to nine hours a night recommended for the age group, researchers said Monday.
Speaking via teleconference from the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association, researchers said that an analysis of data on 16,000 teens also found that youths who reported sleeping less than seven hours a night did not get enough exercise, which could also impact their health.
And not getting enough sleep is detrimental for all -- and has a particularly negative effect on teens, added Caris Fitzgerald, a psychiatry resident at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences who led the study,.
A poor night's sleep can bring on a slew of ill effects, including low energy, poor concentration, moodiness, a greater tendency to act on impulse and more suicidal thoughts.
Yet only 10 percent of U.S. teens get the recommended hours of shut-eye, according to the study, for which Fitzgerald and her fellow researchers analyzed the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's 2009 Youth Risk Behavior Survey.
Because teens have "accelerated demands for growth and memory retention, very vital things with regard to the teen in their overall success," getting sufficient sleep is even more important for them, Fitzgerald said.
But they also struggle to do so more than adults.
"When it comes to teens, they have a lot of factors that affect them, from an ever greater quest for independence reflected by later bedtime; to expectations from parents and peers -- like texting in the middle of the night," said Fitzgerald.
Teens' circadian rhythms don't help them in their quest for sleep either.
Their body rhythms put them on a schedule where they like to stay up late and sleep in each morning.
"But unfortunately the rest of society is not on that schedule and school is still going to start at 8:00 am," Fitzgerald said.
The researchers were unable to conclude there was a cause-effect relationship between sleep and online gaming or sport, but Fitzgerald pointed to "some evidence that reducing media exposure and increasing physical activity could increase the amount teens sleep."
The study did have one piece of good news for teens: watching television does not appear to affect sleep time.
(AFP)
Beirut, 17 May 11, 12:01
Your Comments
You Make the News
Cast Your Comments on this Article
View & Recommend Readers' Comments
Other Headlines
;
Cultured People Happier, Less Stressed
;
Court Says Widow Can Use Dead Husband's Sperm
;
Australia Rules Out Total Smoking Ban
;
Paralyzed Man Freely Moves After Getting Implant
;
Diet Booster Wards off Pregnancy Syndrome
;
Yoga Helps Breast Cancer Patients
;
Study Shows Immigrants Eat US Junk Food to Fit in
;
Tai Chi Improves Mental Health in Elderly
;
Study Shows Video Gaming Teens Sleep Less
;
Ebola Virus Case Reported Near Uganda's Capital
;
The Nose Knows: Allergy Season Here With Vengeance
;
Study Says Early drug Therapy Curbs HIV Transmission
;
New Birth Control Methods Urged for Developing World Women
;
Order of Nurses Discusses with Lebanon's First Lady its Activities and Future Projects
;
U.S. Researchers Identify First Human Lung Stem Cell
;
Alarming Combo: Bedbugs With 'Superbug' Germ Found
Other Categories
Editorials
SpecialReports
Lebanon
Middle East
The World
Interview
Away From Politics
Lebanon Business
World Business
Culture
Lebanon Sports
World Sports
Technology
Health
Fringe
Advertisement
Comments
Please wait while we load the comments
Click to Comment
Recommend Readers' Comments to Promote Their Views
contact us
|
live support
|
advertisers
|
link to us
|
membership agreement
|
privacy policy
An-Nahar
© 2013 Naharnet. All rights reserved.