City
Epaper

Early bedtime may help children maintain healthy weight

By IANS | Updated: April 8, 2020 13:10 IST

Dear parents, kindly take note. Researchers have found that going to bed early and following a consistent bedtime routine may help reduce children's risk of becoming overweight or obese.

Open in App

Sydney, April 8 Dear parents, kindly take note. Researchers have found that going to bed early and following a consistent bedtime routine may help reduce children's risk of becoming overweight or obese.

"While we know it can be hard to get children to bed early, and at consistent times both on weekdays and at weekends, it might help parents or carers to know that establishing consistent and early bedtimes may reduce the risk that their child will be overweight or obese," said study lead author Yaqoot Fatima from the University of Queensland and James Cook University in Australia.

For the findings, published in the journal Acta Paediatrica, the research team wanted to explore sleep patterns in indigenous Australian children and assess the role of sleep timing in longitudinal changes in body mass index (BMI).

In the study of 1,258 Indigenous Australian children were picked with an average age of 6 years.

Latent profile analysis was conducted with the Australian Longitudinal Study of Indigenous Children (LSIC) cohort data, to determine distinct patterns of bed and wake timing, taking account of weekday sleep duration, weekday and weekend bedtimes, and weekday wake times.

Multilevel models with a random intercept were used to investigate the role of baseline sleep pattern in predicting longitudinal changes in BMI.

The researchers found that children who consistently went to bed late experienced greater weight gain over several years than those who went to bed early.

The findings highlight the importance of looking beyond sleep duration and highlighting the benefits of early bedtimes for children.

"As sleep timing is modifiable, this offers the opportunity for improvement in sleep and protecting against future weight gain in indigenous children," the researchers noted.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: Yaqoot fatimaaustraliaSydneyUniversity Of QueenslandJames Cook University
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalIndian Student Brutally Attacked in Australia: 23-Year-Old Left Unconscious with Severe Facial Fractures in Racist Assault

Social ViralGlowing Quoll: Tasmanian Photographer Captures 'Glow in the Dark' Creature in Australia

MumbaiMumbai: Over 10 International Schools Receive Threat Emails in 2 Months via Foreign VPNs; Probe Underway

NationalSolar Eclipse 2025: Know Date, Time, Visibility, and Key Dos & Don’ts

CricketSouth Africa Wins WTC Final 2025; Beats Australia to Claim Historic First World Test Championship Title at Lord’s (VIDEO)

स्वास्थ्य Realted Stories

HealthCentre cuts prices of 35 essential medicines

HealthSpecial edition of 'Fit India-Sundays on Cycle' held at JLN Stadium today

HealthOver 18,900 organ transplants in 2024, highest in a single year: JP Nadda

HealthDiabetic patient can return to normal blood sugar levels without medication: PGI Chandigarh

HealthStates asked to undertake regular screening to tackle rising fatty liver disease: Nadda