Author: Stone, Julia E.; Phillips, Andrew J. K.; Chachos, Evangelos; Hand, Anthony J.; Lu, Sinh; Carskadon, Mary A.; Klerman, Elizabeth B.; Lockley, Steven W.; Wiley, Joshua F.; Bei, Bei; Rajaratnam, Shantha M. W.
                    Title: Inâ€person vs home schooling during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic: Differences in sleep, circadian timing, and mood in early adolescence  Cord-id: 4wyoq4ld  Document date: 2021_8_3
                    ID: 4wyoq4ld
                    
                    Snippet: During the COVIDâ€19 pandemic, schools around the world rapidly transitioned from inâ€person to remote learning, providing an opportunity to examine the impact of inâ€person vs remote learning on sleep, circadian timing, and mood. We assessed sleepâ€wake timing using wrist actigraphy and sleep diaries over 1â€2 weeks during inâ€person learning (n = 28) and remote learning (n = 58, where n = 27 were repeat assessments) in adolescents (age M ± SD = 12.79 ± 0.42 years). Circadian timing was
                    
                    
                    
                     
                    
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            
                                Document: During the COVIDâ€19 pandemic, schools around the world rapidly transitioned from inâ€person to remote learning, providing an opportunity to examine the impact of inâ€person vs remote learning on sleep, circadian timing, and mood. We assessed sleepâ€wake timing using wrist actigraphy and sleep diaries over 1â€2 weeks during inâ€person learning (n = 28) and remote learning (n = 58, where n = 27 were repeat assessments) in adolescents (age M ± SD = 12.79 ± 0.42 years). Circadian timing was measured under a single condition in each individual using salivary melatonin (Dim Light Melatonin Onset; DLMO). Online surveys assessed mood (PROMIS Pediatric Anxiety and Depressive Symptoms) and sleepiness (Epworth Sleepiness Scale – Child and Adolescent) in each condition. During remote (vs inâ€person) learning: (i) on school days, students went to sleep 26 minutes later and woke 49 minutes later, resulting in 22 minutes longer sleep duration (all P < .0001); (ii) DLMO time did not differ significantly between conditions, although participants woke at a later circadian phase (43 minutes, P = .03) during remote learning; and (iii) participants reported significantly lower sleepiness (P = .048) and lower anxiety symptoms (P = .006). Depressive symptoms did not differ between conditions. Changes in mood symptoms were not mediated by sleep. Although remote learning continued to have fixed school start times, removing morning commutes likely enabled adolescents to sleep longer, wake later, and to wake at a later circadian phase. These results indicate that remote learning, or later school start times, may extend sleep and improve some subjective symptoms in adolescents.
 
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