Fatigue and Mood Correlates of Sleep Length in Three Age‐Social Groups: School Children, Students, and Employees

Dec 28, 2006Chronobiology international

How Sleep Length Relates to Tiredness and Mood in Children, Students, and Workers

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Abstract

Adolescents report a sleep deficit of 106 minutes compared to their preferred sleep duration.

  • The declared need for sleep decreases with age, from 9 hours 23 minutes in adolescents to 7 hours 37 minutes in young employees.
  • Females exhibit a greater need for sleep and report higher levels of fatigue, mood, and cognitive problems compared to males.
  • Significant correlations exist between the sleep index and health issues in women, while men show a correlation only with fatigue symptoms.
  • Actual sleep length does not correlate with mood and fatigue issues; however, the declared need for sleep does.
  • Adolescents frequently experience tiredness upon waking (46%) and other complaints, while university students report excessive drowsiness (50%).
  • Chronic sleep loss appears to impact females more severely than males, with younger individuals showing more pronounced associations between sleep and health problems.

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