Raine A, Venables PH. Adolescent daytime sleepiness as a
risk factor for adult crime. J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2017 Feb 23. doi:
10.1111/jcpp.12693. [Epub ahead of print]
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
While recent cross-sectional research has documented a
relationship between sleep problems and antisocial behavior, the longitudinal
nature of this relationship is unknown. This study tests both the hypothesis
that adolescent daytime sleepiness is associated with later adult criminal
offending, and also tests a biopsychosocial mediation model in which social
adversity predisposes to sleepiness, which in turn predisposes to attentional impairment,
and to adult crime.
METHODS:
Schoolboys aged 15 years rated themselves on self-report
sleepiness. Age 15 antisocial behavior was assessed by teacher ratings and
self-reports, while convictions for crime were assessed at age 29. Attentional
capacity at age 15 was assessed by autonomic orienting, with arousal assessed
by the electroencephalogram (EEG).
RESULTS:
Sleepy adolescents were more likely to be antisocial during
adolescence, and were 4.5 times more likely to commit crime by age 29. The
sleepiness-adult crime relationship withstood control for adolescent antisocial
behavior. Self-report sleepiness predicted to adult crime over and above
objective measures of daytime sleepiness (EEG theta activity) and age 15
antisocial behavior. Poor daytime attention partly mediated the sleep-crime
relationship. Mediation analyses also showed that social adversity predisposed
to daytime sleepiness which was associated with reduced attention which in turn
predisposed to adult crime.
CONCLUSIONS:
Findings are the first to document a longitudinal association
between sleepiness in adolescence and crime in adulthood. The longitudinal
nature of this relationship, controlling for age 15 antisocial behavior, is
consistent with the hypothesis that adolescent sleepiness predisposes to later
antisociality. Findings are also consistent with the notion that the
well-established link between social adversity and adult crime is partly
explained by sleepiness. Results suggest that a very brief and simple
assessment of subjective daytime sleepiness may have prognostic clinical value,
and that interventions to reduced sleepiness could be a useful avenue for
future crime prevention.
Courtesy of: https://www.mdlinx.com/neurology/medical-news-article/2017/02/24/adolescent-daytime-sleepiness-crime/7069496/?category=latest&page_id=2
Courtesy of: https://www.mdlinx.com/neurology/medical-news-article/2017/02/24/adolescent-daytime-sleepiness-crime/7069496/?category=latest&page_id=2
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