The Effect of Prebedtime Behaviors on Sleep Duration and Quality in Children: Protocol for a Randomized Crossover Trial
Rosie Jackson, Chao Gu, Jillian Haszard, Kim Meredith-Jones, Barbara Galland, Justine Camp, Deirdre Brown, Rachael Taylor

TL;DR
This study tests how behaviors before bedtime affect children's sleep using objective measurements in a controlled trial.
Contribution
The study introduces a randomized crossover trial using objective measures to assess prebedtime behaviors' impact on children's sleep.
Findings
The study will determine if avoiding screens, physical activity, or eating before bed improves sleep in children.
Objective data from wearables and cameras will provide insights into causal relationships between bedtime behaviors and sleep outcomes.
Abstract
It is recommended that children should avoid eating dinner, being physically active, or using screens in the hour before bed to ensure good sleep health. However, the evidence base behind these guidelines is weak and limited to cross-sectional studies using questionnaires. The aim of this randomized crossover trial was to use objective measures to experimentally determine whether recommendations to improve sleep by banning electronic media, physical activity, or food intake in the hour before bed, impact sleep quantity and quality in the youth. After a baseline week to assess usual behavior, 72 children (10-14.9 years old) will be randomized to four conditions, which are (1) avoid all 3 behaviors, (2) use screens for at least 30 minutes, (3) be physically active for at least 30 minutes, and (4) eat a large meal, during the hour before bed on days 5 to 7 of weeks 2 to 5. Families can…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSleep and related disorders · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Sleep and Wakefulness Research
