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So how much sleep do adolescents really need and how can parents help them achieve it?
The first thing to understand is that teenagers are still growing and their brains are still developing—so they need more sleep than adults.
They also have different sleep-wake rhythms and release melatonin (a natural hormone to prepare for sleep) later, which means evening sleepiness takes longer to occur and they have a tendency to go to bed later and to sleep later in the morning. Though of course, they still have to rise early for school.
Peers also influence teenagers more than they influence younger children. Increased social demands—in the form of online chat, social networking, and web browsing—combine with greater academic pressures as children enter high school. At this age parents also tend to exert less control over teenagers’ bedtimes.
8 to 10 Hours, Regularly
So what are optimal sleep times to support adolescent health? Experts reviewed 864 papers examining relationships between children’s sleep duration and health. They suggested that those between 13 and 18 years of age should sleep eight to 10 hours per 24 hours on a regular basis to promote optimal health.
Video games at night are a recipe for disrupted, short, or low-quality sleep.(Shutterstock)
Unfortunately, worldwide studies show that in 53 percent of cases teenagers are getting less than eight hours of sleep per night on school days.
A recent report indicated that only five percent of adolescents in the United States meet recommendations for sleep, physical activity, and screen time. Older adolescents were less likely than younger adolescents (14 years or less) to achieve the recommendations.
Sex Hormones and the Stress Response
A lot of action takes place in teenage brains due to their developmental stage. During adolescence, there are major changes to thinking, emotions, behavior and interpersonal relationships.
Teenagers react harder to stress as their stress-response systems are still maturing. Sex hormones affect the neurotransmitters in their brains and increase their reactivity to stress. When we add inadequate sleep time to the picture, there can be many implications.
A recent review found teens sleeping less than eight hours are at increased risk for suicide, being overweight, high rates of injury, poor sustained attention, and low school grades.
Teen drivers sleeping six or fewer hours per night reported riskier driving, sensation seeking, and greater drug and alcohol intake than those sleeping more than six hours.
Parents can support screen downtime before bedtime and through the night by parking phones at a charging pad away from bedrooms.
Parents can also help their teens to achieve the recommended eight hours or more of sleep by engaging in relaxing family activities with them in the evening.