In addition, the Child Opportunity Index, which is composed of “education,” “health and environment,” and “social and economic” scores, showed that community-level sleep health was the most important predictor of each individual component.
“The most surprising thing we discovered in this study was that not only was a neighborhood’s sleep health a strong predictor of every element that makes up the Child Opportunity Index, but that it was the most important predictor when compared to other metrics of community health,” said lead author Suzanne Gorovoy, who has a doctorate in psychology and is a postdoctoral research associate in behavioral sleep medicine at the University of Arizona College of Medicine.When all other health variables were taken into account, tooth loss (an extra 15.5%), health insurance (an additional 3.0%), and asthma (an additional 1.4%) were the next three biggest contributors to the Child Opportunity Index.“When neighborhoods were examined relative to the percent that get the recommended amount of sleep, as well as the levels of a wide range of other metrics, it was sleep that outperformed them all in terms of ability to predict that neighborhood’s Child Opportunity Index,” said Gorovoy.That means that a neighborhood’s sleep health is an extremely powerful indicator of that neighborhood’s ability to provide good educational experiences, healthy and safe environments, and social supports.”.
Reference: “0074 Neighborhood-Level Sleep Health and Childhood Opportunity Index at the Census Tract Level: Comparison to Other Health Indicators ” by Suzanne Gorovoy, Sydney Phan, Tommy Begay, Dora Valencia, Lauren Hale, William Killgore, Chloe Wills and Michael Grandner, 25 May 2022, SLEEP.