HALO PhD student Jessica McNeil is first author on a paper, “Objectively-measured sleep and its association with adiposity and physical activity in a sample of Canadian children,” that was recently published in the Journal of Sleep Research. Citation details and a summary of the paper are below.

Jessica Mcneil, Mark S. Tremblay, Geneviève Leduc, Charles Boyer, Priscilla Bélanger, Allana G. Leblanc, Michael M. Borghese, Jean-Philippe Chaput. Objectively-measured sleep and its association with adiposity and physical activity in a sample of Canadian children. Journal of Sleep Research Volume 24, Issue 2, pages 131–139, April 2015.

ABSTRACT: Cross-sectional associations between objectively-measured sleep duration, sleep efficiency and sleep timing with adiposity and physical activity were examined in a cohort of 567 children from Ottawa, Canada. Five-hundred and fifteen children (58.8% female; age: 10.0 ± 0.4 years) had valid sleep measurements and were included in the present analyses. Physical activity, sedentary time and sleep parameters were assessed over 7 days (actigraphy). Height, weight and waist circumference were measured according to standardized procedures. Percentage body fat was assessed using bioelectric impedance analysis. Light physical activity and sedentary time were greater in children with the shortest sleep durations (< 0.0001), whereas children with the highest sleep efficiencies had lower light physical activity and more sedentary time across tertiles (< 0.0001). In multivariable linear regression analyses, and after adjusting for a number of covariates, sleep efficiency was inversely related to all adiposity indices (< 0.05). However, sleep duration and sleep timing were not associated with adiposity indices after controlling for covariates. Inverse associations were noted between sleep duration and light physical activity and sedentary time (< 0.0001). Sleep efficiency (< 0.0001), wake time and sleep timing midpoint (< 0.05) were negatively associated with light physical activity, but positively associated with sedentary time. In conclusion, only sleep efficiency was independently correlated with adiposity in this sample of children. Participants with the shortest sleep durations or highest sleep efficiencies had greater sedentary time. More research is needed to develop better sleep recommendations in children that are based on objective measures of sleep duration, sleep efficiency and sleep timing alike.