Updated
Updated · Rochester Post Bulletin · May 12
US Study Finds Only 22.3% of Older Teens Get 7 Hours of Sleep
Updated
Updated · Rochester Post Bulletin · May 12

US Study Finds Only 22.3% of Older Teens Get 7 Hours of Sleep

3 articles · Updated · Rochester Post Bulletin · May 12
  • A Pediatrics study analyzing national survey data from 1991-2023 found most US teenagers are not regularly getting enough sleep, with only a minority in 2021-2023 reporting seven or more hours a night.
  • Just 22.3% of 18- and 19-year-olds said they usually got at least seven hours, while even among 12- and 13-year-olds the share fell to 37.2% from more than 60% in the early 1990s.
  • Researchers said sleep shortfalls worsen with age and have widened by race, with Black adolescents less likely than white adolescents to report seven or more hours.
  • Possible drivers cited from other research include adolescent biology that favors later sleep schedules, early school start times, heavy nighttime screen use and stressors such as the COVID-19 pandemic.
As teen sleep declines, are we underestimating the long-term economic cost to the nation's future?
Beyond later school starts, what will it take to build a culture that truly values adolescent sleep?
Can the same technology blamed for sleepless nights be redesigned to solve teen exhaustion?