New Study Shows Why You Should Get the Kids to Bed on Time Going to bed at a regular time every night could give your child's brain a boost, recent research shows.  				  					 					By  					  SUMATHI REDDY                				                			                			                				CO    
                              	  	     	     	     	      	   	  	    A large study published in June found that  young children with an irregular bed time fared worse on cognitive tests  several years later. Sumathi Reddy explains on Lunch Break. Photo:  Getty Images.
                                  
  Going to bed at the same time every night could give your child's brain a boost, a recent study found. 
   Researchers at University College  London found that when 3-year-olds have a regular bedtime they perform  better on cognitive tests administered at age 7 than children whose  bedtimes weren't consistent. The findings represent a new twist on an  expanding body of research showing that inadequate sleep in children and  adolescents hurts academic performance and overall health. 
   
                   
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                                                                                                        Izhar Cohen             
  The  latest study considered other factors that can influence bedtime and  cognitive development, such as kids skipping breakfast or having a  television in their bedroom. After accounting for these, the study found  that going to bed very early or very late didn't affect cognitive  performance, so long as the bedtime was consistent. 
   "The surprising thing was the later  bedtimes weren't significantly affecting children's test scores once we  took other factors into account," said Amanda Sacker, director of the  International Center for Lifecourse Studies in Society and Health at  University College London and a co-author of the study. "I think the  message for parents is…maybe a regular bedtime even slightly later is  advisable."
   The researchers suggested that having  inconsistent bedtimes may hurt a child's cognitive development by  disrupting circadian rhythms. It also might result in sleep deprivation  and therefore affect brain plasticity—changes in the synapses and neural  pathways—at critical ages of brain development.
   Sleep experts often focus largely on  how much sleep children get. While that is important, "we tend to not  pay as much attention to this issue of circadian disruption," said  Judith Owens, director of sleep medicine at Children's National Medical  Center in Washington, D.C., who wasn't involved with the study. 
   Insufficient sleep and irregular  bedtimes may each affect cognitive development through different  mechanisms, Dr. Owens said. "The kid who has both [problems] may beat  even higher risk for these cognitive impairments," she said. 
   The study, published online in July in  the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health, examined data on  bedtimes and cognitive scores for 11,178 children. 
   The children were participants in the  U.K.'s Millennium Cohort Study, a nationally representative longterm  study of infants born between 2000 and 2002.
   Mothers were asked about their  children's bedtimes at 3, 5 and 7 years of age. Nearly 20% of the  3-year-olds didn't have a regular bedtime. That figure dropped to 9.1%  at age 5 and 8.2% at age 7. Mothers were also asked about socioeconomic  and demographic characteristics and family routines. 
   When the children were 7 years old,  they received cognitive assessments in reading, math and spatial  abilities. The poorest test scores were recorded by children who went to  bed very early or very late, and by those who had inconsistent  bedtimes, said Dr. Sacker. But once other factors in the home were taken  into account only the inconsistent bedtime was associated with lower  scores, she said.
   A consistent pattern of sleep behavior  mattered. "Those who had irregular bedtimes at all three ages had  significantly poorer scores than those who had regular bedtimes," Dr.  Sacker said. This was especially true for girls who didn't establish  consistent bedtimes between 3 and 7 years old.  
                    Yvonne Kelly, a co-author of the study and a professor  in the department of epidemiology and public health at University  College London, said the researchers aren't sure why girls seemed to be  more affected. She noted that the difference in scores between these  groups of girls and boys wasn't statistically significant for the  reading and spatial tests, but it was for the math test.   
   "I don't think for one moment that boys are immune to these things and girls are more affected," Dr. Kelly said.
   The researchers didn't have data on the  total number of hours children slept overnight because mothers weren't  asked about what time the children woke up. 
   In general school-age  kids—kindergarten through eighth-grade—should be getting about 10 hours  of sleep, while 3- and 4-year-olds might need 11 to 13 hours, including  day-time naps, said Shalini Paruthi, director of the pediatric sleep and  research center at SSM Cardinal Glennon Children's Medical Center at  Saint Louis University. 
   Dr. Paruthi said the good news from  the study is that the majority of the children went to bed at a  consistent time, reinforcing advice from sleep specialists. "The younger  the child is, the better it is to get into the habit of a regular  bedtime," said Dr. Paruthi, who wasn't affiliated with the study. She  recommends a 15-minute, pre-bedtime routine to help the brain transition  from a more alert to a quiet state. 
   And in order to keep the body's  internal clock in sync with the brain, bedtimes on weekends and in the  summer should only stray from the normal time by an hour or less, Dr.  Paruthi said. "The internal clock in the brain and the body like to have  consistency every day," she said.
                    Write to                 Sumathi Reddy at  sumathi.reddy@wsj.com              |