COVID-19 stay-at-home restrictions increase the alignment in sleep and light exposure between school days and weekends in university students

Author:

Rice Alicia1,Sather Olivia1,Wright Kenneth P2,Vetter Céline3,Martin Melanie A4ORCID,de la Iglesia Horacio O1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of Washington , Seattle, WA , USA

2. Sleep and Chronobiology Laboratory, Department of Integrative Physiology, University of Colorado Boulder , Boulder, CO , USA

3. Circadian and Sleep Epidemiology Laboratory, Department of Integrative Physiology, University of Colorado Boulder , Boulder, CO , USA

4. Department of Anthropology, University of Washington , Seattle, WA , USA

Abstract

Abstract Younger adults have a biological disposition to sleep and wake at later times that conflict with early morning obligations like work and school; this conflict leads to inadequate sleep duration and a difference in sleep timing between school days and weekends. The COVID-19 pandemic forced universities and workplaces to shut down in person attendance and implement remote learning and meetings that decreased/removed commute times and gave students more flexibility with their sleep timing. To determine the impact of remote learning on the daily sleep–wake cycle we conducted a natural experiment using wrist actimetry monitors to compare activity patterns and light exposure in three cohorts of students: pre-shutdown in-person learning (2019), during-shutdown remote learning (2020), and post-shutdown in-person learning (2021). Our results show that during-shutdown the difference between school day and weekend sleep onset, duration, and midsleep timing was diminished. For instance, midsleep during school days pre-shutdown occurred 50 min later on weekends (5:14 ± 12 min) than school days (4:24 ± 14 min) but it did not differ under COVID restrictions. Additionally, we found that while the interindividual variance in sleep parameters increased under COVID restrictions the intraindividual variance did not change, indicating that the schedule flexibility did not cause more irregular sleep patterns. In line with our sleep timing results, school day vs. weekend differences in the timing of light exposure present pre- and post-shutdown were absent under COVID restrictions. Our results provide further evidence that increased freedom in class scheduling allows university students to better and consistently align sleep behavior between school days and weekends.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

Center for Studies in Demography and Ecology

University of Washington

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Neurology (clinical)

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