School of Nursing, College of Health Sciences, University of Delaware, 100 Discovery Boulevard 3rd Floor, Newark, DE, 19713, USA.
Department of Psychology, Delaware State University, Dover, DE, USA.
J Community Health. 2024 Oct;49(5):809-819. doi: 10.1007/s10900-024-01344-7. Epub 2024 Apr 2.
The purpose of this study was to explore Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) as a moderator between sleep duration/irregularity and overweight/obesity in U.S. adolescents. Using the National Survey of Children's Health 2017-2018 cross-sectional dataset, we included adolescents with available sleep and Body Mass Index (BMI) data. In a sample of 24,100 adolescents (mean age = 13.56 years, 49.35% female; 51% White), parents reported adolescent's sleep duration/irregularity, and number of ACEs. Logistic regression estimated the interaction between sleep duration/irregularity and the number of ACEs on overweight/obesity risk (BMI ≥ 85th percentile-for-age) using a stepwise approach and accounting for complex survey design. In the 24,100 adolescents, 33% were overweight/obese, 50% had ≥ 1 ACE, 37% slept < 8-10 h/night, and 14% had irregular sleep. Accounting for covariates and ACEs, every hour increase in sleep duration was associated with 6% decrease in overweight/obesity odds. There was a significant interaction between sleep duration and ACEs; the association between increasing sleep duration and decreasing odds of overweight/obesity was significant only in adolescents without ACEs (OR = 0.87, 95% CI [0.80, 0.95], p < 0.001). Increasing sleep duration is a recognized intervention target to decrease obesity risk, yet in adolescents experiencing ≥ 1 ACE, this protective role may be dampened. Future work may explore mechanisms for overweight/obesity development to inform interventions for adolescents facing adversity.
本研究旨在探讨童年逆境经历(ACEs)是否为美国青少年睡眠时长/不规律与超重/肥胖的调节因素。我们使用了 2017-2018 年全国儿童健康调查的横断面数据集,纳入了有睡眠和体重指数(BMI)数据的青少年。在 24100 名青少年(平均年龄为 13.56 岁,49.35%为女性;51%为白人)中,父母报告了青少年的睡眠时长/不规律和 ACE 数量。使用逐步方法和复杂调查设计,logistic 回归估计了睡眠时长/不规律与 ACE 数量之间的相互作用对超重/肥胖风险(BMI≥第 85 百分位-年龄)的影响。在 24100 名青少年中,33%超重/肥胖,50%有≥1 个 ACE,37%每晚睡眠时长<8-10 小时,14%睡眠不规律。在考虑了协变量和 ACEs 后,每增加 1 小时睡眠时长,超重/肥胖的几率就会降低 6%。睡眠时长与 ACEs 之间存在显著的交互作用;只有在没有 ACE 的青少年中,增加睡眠时长与降低超重/肥胖几率之间的关联才具有统计学意义(OR=0.87,95%CI [0.80, 0.95],p<0.001)。增加睡眠时长是减少肥胖风险的公认干预目标,但对于经历≥1 个 ACE 的青少年来说,这种保护作用可能会减弱。未来的研究可能会探索超重/肥胖发展的机制,为面临逆境的青少年提供干预措施。