Jason Gill’s research while affiliated with University of South Australia and other places

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Publications (2)


Figure 1.  The main reasons provided by adolescents and parents for reporting that the adolescent has a sleep problem.
Table 1.  The proportion of adolescents with individual clinical indicators of a sleep problem (all estimate are from sleep diary reports on school nights).
Table 2.  Correlations between variables entered into the logistic regression.
Table 3.  Predictors of an adolescent self-reported sleep problem.
Identifying Adolescent Sleep Problems
  • Article
  • Full-text available

September 2013

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324 Reads

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79 Citations

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Jason Gill

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To examine the efficacy of self-report and parental report of adolescent sleep problems and compare these findings to the incidence of adolescents who fulfill clinical criteria for a sleep problem. Sleep and daytime functioning factors that predict adolescents' self-identification of a sleep problem will also be examined. 308 adolescents (aged 13-17 years) from eight socioeconomically diverse South Australian high schools participated in this study. Participants completed a survey battery during class time, followed by a 7-day Sleep Diary and the Flinders Fatigue Scale completed on the final day of the study. Parents completed a Sleep, Medical, Education and Family History Survey. The percentage of adolescents fulfilling one or more of the criteria for a sleep problem was inordinately high at 66%. Adolescent self-reporting a sleep problem was significantly lower than the adolescents who had one or more of the clinical criteria for a sleep problem (23.1% vs. 66.6%; χ(2) = 17.46, p<.001). Parental report of their adolescent having a sleep problem was significantly lower than adolescent self-report (14.3% vs. 21.1%, p<.001). Adolescents who reported unrefreshing sleep were 4.81 times more likely to report a sleep problem. For every hour that bedtime was delayed, the odds of self-reporting a sleep problem increased by 1.91 times, while each additional 10 minutes taken to fall asleep increased the odds 1.40 times. While many adolescents were found to have sleep patterns indicative of a sleep problem, only a third of this number self-identify having a sleep problem, while only a sixth of this number are indicated by parental report. This study highlights important features to target in future sleep education and intervention strategies for both adolescents and parents.

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Citations (2)


... Indeed, our study revealed that the prevalences of poor sleep and depressive symptoms were 50.4% and 23.8%, respectively, which was consistent with the findings of previous studies conducted among elite youth athletes [6,28]. During adolescence, changes in bioregulatory sleep processes can lead to various sleep difficulties [29], such as difficulty falling asleep, sleep disturbances, and daytime dysfunction, which, in turn, contribute to increased depression. A meta-analysis has suggested that prolonged sleep latency and sleep disturbances, which are related to wakefulness in bed, are characteristics of depression in adolescents [30]. ...

Reference:

Relationship Between Poor Sleep and Depressive Symptoms in Korean Elite Youth Athletes
Identifying Adolescent Sleep Problems

... Moreover, over the past 10 32 years, the number of users has almost doubled -in 2010, the penetration of the Internet 33 into the Russian population was only 42.8% [2]. A certain number of Internet users, 34 mainly adolescents and young adults, develop Internet addiction (IA) or "pathologi- 35 cal/compulsive use of the Internet", characterized by a loss of control over the time spent 36 online, an obsessive craving for various types of Internet activities, which often becomes 37 the catalyst for the formation of a wide range of psychosocial and psychosomatic prob- 38 lems. 39 In recent years, it has become apparent that excessive human interaction with infor-40 mation and communication technologies is becoming a major public health problem. ...

Identifying adolescent sleep problems
  • Citing Article
  • August 2013

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