Eating too much junk food has been linked with poor sleep quality in teens, a University of Queensland-led study has found.

UQ School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences researcher Associate Professor Asad Khan said frequent consumption of soft drinks and fast food was strongly associated with sleep disturbance in adolescents around the world.

โ€œThis is the first study to examine unhealthy diets and stress-related sleep disturbance on a global scale in high school students from 64 countries,โ€ Dr Khan said.

โ€œOverall, 7.5 per cent of adolescents reported stress-related sleep disturbance, which was more common among females than males.

โ€œSleep disturbance increased with more frequent consumption of carbonated soft drinks, that often contain caffeine, and/or fast foods, that are traditionally energy-dense and nutrient-poor.

โ€œTeens who drank more than three soft drinks per day had 55 per cent higher odds of reporting sleep disturbance than those who only drank one soft drink a day.

โ€œMales who ate fast foods on more than four days per week had 55 per cent higher odds of reporting sleep disturbance than those who only ate fast food once a week, while the odds were 49 per cent higher in females.

โ€œFrequent consumption of soft drinks more than three times a day, and fast foods more than four days per week, were significantly associated with sleep disturbance in all but low-income countries.โ€


DAILY DOSE: Trump Replaces Casey Means With Fox News Doctor as Surgeon General Pick; Hidden Piece of Pangaea Revealed Beneath Appalachia.
Trump replaces surgeon general nominee amid vaccine concerns and criticism.
Climate change a global threat to brain health, stroke experts say
Climate change increases stroke risks through extreme weather, with efforts needed to …
Snow cover on Greek mountains has more than halved in four decades, study finds
A study reveals that snow cover in Greece's mountains has decreased by …
UN Women report finds online violence and deepfakes drive women from public life
A report reveals increasing online violence against women, worsening mental health and …

Data was collected from the World Health Organizationโ€™s Global School-based Health Surveys between 2009 and 2016, which included 175,261 students aged 12 to 15 years from 64 low, middle, and high income countries across South East Asia, Africa, parts of South America and the Eastern Mediterranean.

โ€œTeens in high-income countries had the highest association between frequent intake of soft drinks and sleep disturbance,โ€ Dr Khan said.

โ€œFemales in these countries showed the biggest connection between regularly eating fast foods and sleep problems.

โ€œAdolescents in South-Asia showed a high connection between drinking soft drink and sleep disturbance, while those in the Western-Pacific region showed the greatest link between both soft drink and fast food consumption and sleep issues.โ€

Dr Khan said the findings were of particular concern as poor quality sleep adversely impacted on adolescent wellbeing and cognitive development.

โ€œThe targeting of these unhealthy behaviours needs to be a priority of policies and planning,โ€ he said.

โ€œStrategies need to be customised and tailored across countries or regions to meet their local needs.

โ€œAs stress-related sleep disturbance was more common among girls than boys, girls should be a priority target group for associated interventions that could target stress management and sleep quality.

โ€œCreating school environments to limit access to carbonated soft drinks and fast foods, and introducing a sugar tax to lessen the sales of soft drinks may be beneficial.

โ€œFamily can also be instrumental in promoting healthy eating as the adoption and maintenance of children’s dietary behaviours are influenced by their familial environments.โ€

The study was conducted in collaboration with Griffith University, Queensland University of Technology, Deakin University, and Active Healthy Kids Bangladesh.

Processingโ€ฆ
Success! You're on the list.

Leave a Reply

Trending

Discover more from Scientific Inquirer

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading