4.5 Article

Sleep duration and body mass index in 0-7-year olds

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ARCHIVES OF DISEASE IN CHILDHOOD
卷 96, 期 8, 页码 735-739

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BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/adc.2010.204925

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  1. Commonwealth Department of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs (FaHCSIA)
  2. NHMRC [284556, 546405, 436914]

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Objectives To determine in children aged 0-7 years (1) cross-sectional relationships between body mass index (BMI) and sleep duration, and whether (2) sleep duration predicts later BMI and/or (3) BMI predicts later sleep duration. Design Longitudinal Study of Australian Children, Waves 1 and 2. Participants Infants aged 0-1 years (Wave 1), followed at age 2-3 years (Wave 2); children aged 4-5 years (Wave 1), followed at age 6-7 years (Wave 2). Main outcome measures BMI, sleep duration by time-use diary, parent-reported sleep problems (none/mild vs moderate/severe). Analyses: Cross-sectional, ANOVA (sleep duration) and chi(2) (sleep problems); longitudinal, linear regression. Results 3857 (76%) infants and 3844 (77%) children had BMI and sleep data. At every wave, approximately 15% and 5% of children were overweight and obese, respectively. Obesity was not associated with sleep duration at 0-1, 2-3 or 4-5 years, though obese 6-7-year olds slept approximately 30 min less (p<0.001). Sleep problems were similar across BMI categories at all ages. Wave 1 sleep duration did not predict Wave 2 BMI, nor did Wave 1 BMI predict Wave 2 sleep duration. Conclusions In these large child population cohorts, sleep duration did not predict obesity up to age 6-7 years. Current trials of sleep interventions to prevent or manage obesity in young children may be premature.

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