首页> 外文期刊>Journal of clinical sleep medicine: JCSM : official publication of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine >No independent association between insufficient sleep and childhood obesity in the National Survey of Children's Health.
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No independent association between insufficient sleep and childhood obesity in the National Survey of Children's Health.

机译:全国儿童健康调查中,睡眠不足与儿童肥胖之间没有独立的关联。

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BACKGROUND: Prior studies have supported an association between insufficient sleep and childhood obesity, but most have not examined nationally representative samples or considered potential sociodemographic confounders. OBJECTIVE: The main objective of this study was to use a large, nationally representative dataset to examine the possibility that insufficient sleep is associated with obesity in children, independent of sociodemographic factors. METHODS: The National Survey of Children's Health is a national survey of U.S. households contacted by random digit dialing. In 2003, caregivers of 102,353 US children were surveyed. Age- and sex-specific body mass index (BMI) based on parental report of child height and weight, was available for 81,390 children aged 6-17 years. Caregivers were asked, How many nights of sufficient sleep did your child have in the past week? odds of obesity (BMI >/= 95th percentile) versus healthy weight (BMI 5th-84th percentile) was regressed on reported nights of sufficient sleep per week (categorized as 0-2, 3-5, or 6-7). Sociodemographic variables included gender, race, household education, and family income. Analyses incorporated sampling weights to derive nationally representative estimates for a 2003 population of 34 million youth. RESULTS: Unadjusted bivariate analyses indicated that children aged 6-11 years with 0-2 nights of sufficient sleep, in comparison to those with 6-7 nights, were more likely to be obese (OR = 1.7, 95% CI [1.2-2.3]). Among children aged 12-17 years, odds of obesity were lower among children with 3-5 nights of sufficient sleep in comparison to those with 6-7 nights (0.8, 95% CI: 0.7-0.9). However, in both age groups, adjustment for race/ethnicity, gender, family income, and household education left no remaining statistical significance for the association between sufficient nights of sleep and BMI. CONCLUSION: In this national sample, insufficient sleep, as judged by parents, is inconsistently associated with obesity in bivariate analyses, and not associated with obesity after adjustment for sociodemographic variables. These findings from a nationally representative sample are necessarily subject to parental perceptions, but nonetheless serve as an important reminder that the role of insufficient sleep in the childhood obesity epidemic remains unproven.
机译:背景:先前的研究支持睡眠不足与儿童肥胖之间的关联,但大多数研究尚未检查全国代表性的样本或被认为是潜在的社会人口统计学混杂因素。目的:本研究的主要目的是使用一个大型的,具有全国代表性的数据集,以检验儿童睡眠不足与肥胖相关的可能性,而不受社会人口统计学因素的影响。方法:《全国儿童健康调查》是对通过随机数字拨号联系的美国家庭的一项全国调查。 2003年,对102,353名美国儿童的保姆进行了调查。基于父母身高的孩子身高和体重的报告,针对年龄和性别的体重指数(BMI)适用于81,390名6-17岁的儿童。有人问看护者,您的孩子在过去一周里有多少夜充足的睡眠?在报告的每周有充足睡眠的夜晚(分类为0-2、3-5或6-7)上,肥胖(BMI> / = 95%)与健康体重(BMI 5-84%)的几率进行了回归。社会人口统计学变量包括性别,种族,家庭教育和家庭收入。分析纳入了抽样权重,以得出2003年3400万青年人口的全国代表性估计值。结果:未经调整的双变量分析表明,与6-7个晚上的孩子相比,6-11岁,0-2个晚上的充足睡眠的儿童更容易肥胖(OR = 1.7,95%CI [1.2-2.3 ])。在12至17岁的儿童中,有3-5晚睡眠的儿童的肥胖几率比6至7晚的儿童低(0.8,95%CI:0.7-0.9)。但是,在这两个年龄组中,种族/族裔,性别,家庭收入和家庭教育的调整对于充足的睡眠时间和BMI之间的关联都没有留下统计意义。结论:在这个国家样本中,父母判断睡眠不足与肥胖的二元分析不一致,与调整社会人口统计学变量后与肥胖无关。从全国代表性的样本中得出的这些发现必定会受到父母的理解,但仍然提醒人们,睡眠不足在儿童肥胖症流行中的作用尚未得到证实。

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