Lecture 19-sleep, Nutrition and wellbeing for our children Flashcards

Sleep, Nutrition and wellbeing for our children flashcards

1
Q

why is sleep important for adults

A
  • improves mood
  • decision making
  • relationships
  • productivity
  • safer when driving a car
  • better academic results
  • better mental health
  • better immune system
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2
Q

why is sleep important for children

A
  • less tantrums
  • listening better
  • concentrate at school
  • more energy for activities
  • more patience
  • happier
  • less battles at bedtime
  • growth and development
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3
Q

what are things that drive you to sleep

A
  • adenosine
  • circadian rhythms
  • melatonin
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4
Q

what is adenosine

A

a neurotransmitter that promotes sleep drive or a persons need to sleep

A deep sleep or slow wave sleep is believed to be prolonged by adenosine

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5
Q

what are circadian rhythms

A

24 hour cycles that are part of the body’s internal clock, running in the background to carry out essential functions and processes

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6
Q

what is melatonin

A

a hormone that regulates the sleep wake cycle

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7
Q

sleep disorders are often the focus for health, but ….

A

does the absence of a sleep disorder really mean that you have healthy sleep ?

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8
Q

what are some sleep disorders

A
  • sleep apnoea
  • insomnia
  • narcolepsy
  • restless legs syndrome
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9
Q

what is sleep apnoea and what does it increase risk for

A

airway is blocked, can increase risk of type 2 diabetes

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10
Q

what is sleep health

A

multidimensional pattern of sleep-wakefulness adapted to individual, social and environmental demands that promotes physical and mental wellbeing

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11
Q

good sleep health is characterised by

A

by subjective satisfaction, appropriate timing, adequate duration, high efficiency and sustained alertness during waking hours

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12
Q

what is sleep duration

A

the quantity or amount of time that a person sleeps

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13
Q

sleep duration may be measured…

A

for just one sleep period (e.g overnight) or over the course of a 24 hour day

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14
Q

what is sleep quality

A

how well a person sleeps

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15
Q

sleep quality is often measured through ….. but can

A

a persons satisfaction with their sleep but can include other quantitative measures too (how long it takes to fall asleep, whether they were able to stay asleep, parent reports of awakenings)

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16
Q

a cochran review on dietary interventions compared to control for preventing obesity in children aged 6-12 found

A

high certainty of evidence by dietary interventions alone do not seem to reduce BMI z score

17
Q

the POI study brief sleep intervention in infancy had what outcomes in obesity

A

after 2 and 5 years, children that received sleep intervention had reduced risk of obesity compared to those who had not

18
Q

it has been found that short sleep duration …

A

increases risk of obesity across age groups

19
Q

When kids are sleeping less there was a connection

A

to their diet and energy intake related to obesity

20
Q

what was the study design of the DREAM study

A

randomised control trial : a within subject cross over design

21
Q

what did they do in the dream study

A

intervention at weeks 3 and 5

will swap each week, one week is sleep restriction one is sleep extension (1 hour earlier and 1 later)

22
Q

what happened during each intervention week of the DREAM study

A
  • questionnaire on eating behaviour and wellbeing
  • 24 hour diet recalls and a feeding experiment
  • wear a camera for two days (to see screen time and foods)
  • measured physical activity and sleep using accelerometers (worn for 24 hrs a day)
23
Q

what was the primary aim of the DREAM study

A

to determine whether mild sleep deprivation increases eating in the absence of hunger

24
Q

what was the issue with the eating in the absence of hunger experiment in the DREAM study

A

in week 5, the second time they did this experiment they worked out if they ate less in the first round they could eat more of the sweets in the second round

25
Q

instead of cross overdesign, what was used to show the effect of sleeo deprivation on EAH in DREAM study

A

parallel analysis

26
Q

what was the secondary analysis of the dream study

A

to determine whether mild sleep deprivation influences dietary intake and eating behaviour

27
Q

dietary intake in the DREAM study was measured by

A

4 x 24 hr recalls

28
Q

what was found in the per protocol analysis group of dream study : energy and macronutrient intake

A

sleep deprivation consumed more, same with the total group but per protocol analysis had all positive 95% confidence intervals

29
Q

what were key eating behaviours that changed with sleep restriction

A

increased emotional over and underrating, and slightly food fussiness

30
Q

in the where does time go when children dont study, the 48.8 minutes of sleep was reallocated to

A
  • 22 minutes sedentary behaviour
  • 19 minutes light physical activity
  • 2.8 minutes to moderate to vigorous physical activity
31
Q

what was found about sleep loss dietary intake in children, with kids who re-allocated their time to sedentary behaviour

A

consumed more energy from non-core foods

32
Q

what was found about sleep loss dietary intake in children, with kids who re-allocated their time to moderate or vigorous physical activity

A

consumed more energy from core foods

33
Q

do children appear to decrease their physical activity when they are tired

A

they dont appear to

34
Q

sleep deprivation seemed to

A

decrease childs health related quality of life

35
Q

diet appears to partly explain

A

the relationship between sleep and obesity

36
Q

what are the limitations to the DREAM study

A
  • mainly Nz european, low level of deprivation
  • short teem
  • diet recalls :subject to under and overreporting
  • some measurements were subjective
37
Q

what is the next research happening

A

Using automated cameras to monitor children’s device use