2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.ccm.2022.02.008
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Sleep Deficiency in Adolescents

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Cited by 2 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Adolescents may present with one or more different types of sleep impairment, such as increased sleep onset latency (i.e. the time required to transition from wakefulness to sleep), later bedtimes or erratic sleep patterns, poor sleep hygiene, reduced weekday sleep duration, reduced total sleep time, and increased daytime sleepiness [12,14,15]. Adolescents also experience social jetlag, which describes inconsistent timing of sleep across the week, whereby they sleep less during weekdays, and subsequently attempt to compensate on the weekends by sleeping more and waking up later [16 & ].…”
Section: Adolescence and Sleep Patternsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Adolescents may present with one or more different types of sleep impairment, such as increased sleep onset latency (i.e. the time required to transition from wakefulness to sleep), later bedtimes or erratic sleep patterns, poor sleep hygiene, reduced weekday sleep duration, reduced total sleep time, and increased daytime sleepiness [12,14,15]. Adolescents also experience social jetlag, which describes inconsistent timing of sleep across the week, whereby they sleep less during weekdays, and subsequently attempt to compensate on the weekends by sleeping more and waking up later [16 & ].…”
Section: Adolescence and Sleep Patternsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Adolescents also experience social jetlag, which describes inconsistent timing of sleep across the week, whereby they sleep less during weekdays, and subsequently attempt to compensate on the weekends by sleeping more and waking up later [16 & ]. Adolescents often have a biologically mediated delayed sleep-wake phase, such that their internal biological sleep clock initiates sleep onset to a later time [14,15,17], with evidence that adolescents begin feeling tired around 11 p.m. [9]. When this biological shift is extreme, it leads to functional impairment due to social norms (ex: early school start times) [3].…”
Section: Adolescence and Sleep Patternsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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