Sleep quality is increasingly recognized as a critical lifestyle determinant of physical and mental health during adolescence, yet declining sleep quality among adolescents has become a growing public health concern. Factors such as screen use, sedentary behavior, and mental health problems have been linked to poor sleep in young people, but there were few systematic evaluations of how these factors interact with residential location and gender.
In the new study, researchers surveyed 5,713 adolescents aged 13 to 18 years across six cities in China, collecting data on sleep quality using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), as well as BMI, physical fitness, sedentary time, screen time, and mental health. Data was also available on each participant’s residential location (urban or rural) and their gender.
Overall, 33.71% of participants had poor sleep quality. Mental health emerged as the strongest protective factor, with higher mental health scores associated with lower risk of poor outcomes across all sleep measures. Higher BMI, more sedentary time, and more screen time were associated with greater odds of poor sleep outcomes.
The researchers also found significant disparities by residence and gender. Rural adolescents had higher rates of poor sleep quality than their urban peers (35.78% vs. 31.90%, p<0.001), and fared worse on sleep latency, sleep duration, and sleep disturbances.
Female adolescents fared worse than males across nearly all sleep measures, with 38.40% of girls classified as having poor sleep quality compared with 29.20% of boys (p<0.001). Rurality and gender also moderated how strongly behavioral and health factors affected sleep: the adverse effects of higher BMI on sleep were more pronounced in girls, while the protective effects of good mental health were stronger among rural adolescents.
The study is limited by its cross-sectional design, which does not allow causal conclusions. Sleep quality and behavioral indicators were assessed by self-report, which could have introduced bias, and nuances in the daily timings of sleep, screen time, and sedentary time were not available.
The researchers conclude that Chinese adolescents living in rural areas and female adolescents may experience a greater burden of poor sleep quality, and that addressing screen time, BMI, and mental health might be key to improving sleep across the adolescent population.