Possible insomnia predicts some risky behaviors among adolescents when controlling for depressive symptoms

Citation

Catrett, Christina D. & Gaultney, Jane F. (2009). Possible insomnia predicts some risky behaviors among adolescents when controlling for depressive symptoms. Journal of Genetic Psychology. vol. 170 (4) pp. 287-309

Abstract

This study investigated whether previously reported links between sleep and risk taking among adolescents (E. M. O’Brien & J. A. Mindell, 2005) are associated—concurrently, longitudinally, or both—with sleep or underlying depression. The present study analyzed data from a nationally representative sample of 4,353 adolescents in the United States who had participated in Waves I and II of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (J. R. Udry, 1998). In the present study, grade, gender, depressive symptoms, and possible insomnia served as predictor variables to calculate the odds ratios for 4 categories of risky behaviors. After the authors accounted for other predictors, possible insomnia significantly predicted smoking, delinquency (within each wave but not longitudinally), and drinking and driving (Wave II and longitudinally). Possible insomnia may contribute to some types of risky behaviors over the effects of depressive symptoms.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080%2F00221320903218331

Keyword(s)

Genetic Depression

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Journal of Genetic Psychology

Author(s)

Catrett, Christina D.
Gaultney, Jane F.

Year Published

2009

Volume Number

170

Issue Number

4

Pages

287-309

DOI

10.1080/00221320903218331

Reference ID

1109