Article

"Sleep is healthy for your body and brain." Use of student-centered photovoice to explore the translation of sleep promotion at school to sleep behavior at home

Details

Citation

Bird M, McKernan C, Montemurro G, Brown C, Flynn J, Neely KC, Sobierajski F, Sulz L & Storey K (2021) "Sleep is healthy for your body and brain." Use of student-centered photovoice to explore the translation of sleep promotion at school to sleep behavior at home. Sleep Health, 7 (5), pp. 588-595. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sleh.2021.05.006

Abstract
Study objectives Schools are an important setting to teach and reinforce positive health behaviors such as sleep, however, research that incorporates the student perspective of school-based sleep promotion initiatives is limited. This study explored student's perceptions of sleep behavior (how they understood and valued positive and negative sleep behaviors) and determined if and how students translate school-based sleep promotion to the home. Methods Forty-five grade 4 and 5 children (aged 9-11 years) were purposefully sampled from 3 schools participating in the Alberta Project Promoting healthy Living for Everyone in schools (APPLE) in Edmonton, Canada. Using focused ethnography as the method and photovoice as a data generating strategy, qualitative in-depth information was generated through photo-taking and one-on-one interviews. Data were analyzed in an iterative, cyclical process using latent content analysis techniques. Results Four themes related to students’ perception of sleep behavior within the context of a school-based sleep promotion initiative were identified: sleep is “healthy for your body and brain,” sleep habits are rooted in the home environment, school experiences shape positive sleep habits at home, and students translate sleep promotion home if they think it is useful or would be acceptable to the family. Conclusion and implications School-based sleep promotion interventions that are grounded in the comprehensive school health (CSH) approach hold promise for successfully shaping student sleep behavior. To promote health and academic success in children, future interventions should include home-school partnerships that address child sleep across multiple critical learning environments.

Keywords
Comprehensive school health; student-centered; school-based sleep promotion; home environment; home school interaction; photovoice; school-based health promotion; qualitative

Journal
Sleep Health: Volume 7, Issue 5

StatusPublished
FundersCanadian Institutes of Health Research
Publication date31/10/2021
Publication date online21/07/2021
Date accepted by journal28/05/2021
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/33227
ISSN2352-7218
eISSN2352-7218