Mental Health

Insomnia May Begin in Childhood, Study Claims

By Corazon Victorino | Update Date: Apr 10, 2024 12:43 AM EDT
sleeping child

sleeping child | (Photo : Image by Daniela Dimitrova from Pixabay)

A recent study led by Penn State researchers has uncovered a concerning trend: childhood-onset insomnia, which persists into young adulthood and disproportionately affects minority youths, particularly Black children.

Published in the journal Sleep, the research observed the chronic nature of insomnia symptoms from an early age and highlighted the significant health risks associated with this condition.

The study, involving over 500 participants from the Penn State Child Cohort, revealed that 23.3% experienced persistent insomnia symptoms across various stages of development, with Black and Hispanic/Latino youths facing elevated risks.

The findings emphasized the critical importance of early detection and intervention to address insomnia symptoms in children, thereby mitigating potential long-term health consequences.

Lead researcher Julio Fernandez-Mendoza, a professor at Penn State College of Medicine, noted that childhood-onset insomnia is not a transient phase but can persist into adulthood, posing risks for cardiometabolic diseases, depression, and anxiety.

"Insomnia isn't like childhood sleep terrors or sleepwalking. It won't go away with puberty and maturation for many children," Fernandez-Mendoza explained, according to Neuroscience News.

The study's longitudinal approach followed participants from childhood through young adulthood, assessing insomnia symptoms at different developmental stages.

Results revealed that Black participants were 2.6 times more likely than their white counterparts to experience persistent insomnia symptoms into adulthood, with Hispanic/Latino youths also facing elevated risks.

Fernandez-Mendoza stressed the need for increased attention to insomnia symptoms in children and adolescents, advocating for early intervention strategies to address this public health concern effectively.

"We shouldn't wait until someone comes to the clinic as an adult who has suffered from poor sleep all their life. We need to pay more attention to insomnia symptoms in children and adolescents," Mendoza reportedly said.

The research, funded by various institutes of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), fills a crucial gap in understanding the long-term trajectory of childhood-onset insomnia and its disproportionate impact on minority communities.

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