A nationwide cross-sectional study of difficulty waking up for school among adolescents

Author:

Kinoshita Yu1,Itani Osamu1ORCID,Otsuka Yuichiro1,Matsumoto Yuuki1,Nakagome Sachi1,Osaki Yoneatsu2,Higuchi Susumu3,Maki Jike4,Kanda Hideyuki5,Kaneita Yoshitaka1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Public Health, Department of Social Medicine, Nihon University School of Medicine, Japan

2. Division of Environmental and Preventive Medicine, Department of Social Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University, Japan

3. National Hospital Organization Kurihama Medical and Addiction Center, Japan

4. Department of Food Safety and Management, Faculty of Food and Health Sciences, Showa Women’s University, Japan

5. Department of Public Health, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Japan

Abstract

Abstract Study Objectives To determine the prevalence of and risk-factors for difficulty waking up for school among adolescents. Methods We used a self-administered questionnaire (140 junior high schools [JHSs]; 124 senior high schools [SHSs]) selected randomly in 2012 from throughout Japan. Results Total response rate: 60.7%. Data from 38 494 JHS and 61 556 SHS students were analyzed. The prevalence of at least one instance of school tardiness/absence due to difficulty waking up over a 30-day period was 10.9 (95% confidence-interval:10.5–11.3)%/2.9(2.7–3.1)% for JHS-boys and 7.7(7.3–8.1)%/2.0(1.8–2.2)% for JHS-girls. The prevalence was 15.5(15.1–15.9)%/5.6(5.3–5.9)% for SHS-boys and 14.4(14.0–14.8)%/5.9(5.6–6.2)% for SHS-girls. We used ordinal regression to identify the risk factors associated with the experience of school tardiness/absence. Factors significantly associated with school tardiness in all four groups (JHS boys/girls, SHS boys/girls) were “no-participation-in-club-activities,” “early-morning-awakening,” “feeling bad throughout a morning,” “drinking,” and “smoking.” Among associated factors, the highest odds ratio was found for monthly smoking-days (none vs. at least one-day or more) for JHS-girls at 5.30(3.57–7.85). Factors significantly associated with school absence in all four groups were “no wishing to go to university,” “no participation in club activities,” “disorders of initiating and maintaining sleep,” “long internet use,” “drinking,” “smoking,” “poor-mental-health” and “feeling bad throughout a morning.” Among associated factors, the highest odds ratio was found for monthly smoking-days (none vs. at least one-day or more) for JHS-girls at 4.60(3.45–6.15). Conclusions These results suggest that the risk factors for difficulty waking up among adolescents are sleep status, lifestyle, and mental health, which can indicate the presence of an underlying disease.

Funder

Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare in Japan

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Clinical Neurology

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