Getting the right amount of sleep is vital to a child’s
health and mental alertness, particularly as the school year winds through
the post-holiday months.
Many children
don’t get enough sleep, according to Dr. Kamal Naqvi, medical director of
the Sleep Disorders Center at Children’s, the only pediatric-only sleep
center in Dallas accreditied by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine.
Homework, household chores, social activities, medical conditions and
over-stimulating sleeping environments (such as bright lights, TVs, radios
and computers) are among the reasons children don’t get enough sleep.
The days before alarm clocks
Nearly a century ago children and adults slept one to two hours more
than they do currently. With no alarm clocks, children awakened
spontaneously or in response to a parent. Parents now expect children to
sleep less, says Dr. Naqvi, who is also an assistant professor of
Pediatrics at UT Southwestern.
“Parents
often view getting proper nutrition to be of vital importance to their
child and will go to any end to make sure their child does not leave the
table hungry,” Dr. Naqvi says. “Few parents maintain the same attitude
when it comes to sleep.”
Typically,
elementary-age children require 10 to 11 hours of sleep, and middle
school-age and high school-age children require at least nine hours of
sleep. In one study, when teenagers were allowed to sleep undisturbed,
most slept for more than nine hours.
Dr. Naqvi says sleep-deprived children often experience excessive daytime
sleepiness and exhibit symptoms of attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder, emotional problems and show poorer ability to tolerate
frustration. Studies show sleep-deprived children experience more learning
and behavioral problems.
“A child
should not have to be blasted out of bed every morning – that is sleep
deprivation,” Dr. Naqvi says. “Children require as much sleep as it takes
to wake up spontaneously and feel alert all day.”
Getting back in
sync
When allowed to sleep late over the summer, children will
accomplish all of the sleep that they need, he explains. When school
starts, everything changes because the child now has a requirement to be
awake at a certain time.
“In general,
school schedules are not in sync with the clock in a child’s body,” Dr.
Naqvi says, adding that “most children frequently are still in need of
more sleep when they are awakened for school. This problem is seen
beginning in 5- or 6-year-olds and becomes most severe in teen-agers.”
Some school systems have moved the
start of school an hour later to deal with these problems. Studies of
children in these schools show they go to bed at the same time and sleep
an hour more. The results are fewer late arrivals, fewer absences, better
behavior and improved grades.
Dr. Naqvi
suggests keeping a child’s sleep schedule the same on weekdays and
weekends to enable the child to begin sleep earlier on Sunday night,
thereby beginning the school week well-rested.
Click here for more information on healthy sleep
habits for infants and older children on the Children's Web
site.