How much sleep for kids? New guidelines released

FILE - In this May 29, 2015 file photo, Indians sleep on the roof of a house to beat the heat in New Delhi, India. Even for a world getting used to wild weather, May seems stuck on strange. Torrential downpours in Texas, whiplashing the region from drought to flooding. A heatwave that has already killed more than 1800 in India and is the fifth deadliest since 1900. Record 91 degree temperature in of all places Alaska. A pair of top-of-the-scale typhoons in the Northwest Pacific.  And a drought in the U.S. East is starting to take root just as the one ends in Texas.  (AP Photo/Tsering Topgyal, File)

In this May 29, 2015 file photo, Indians sleep on the roof of a house to beat the heat in New Delhi, India. AP

CHICAGO, United States — Parental warning: Don’t lose sleep over new guidelines on how much shut-eye your kids should be getting.

The recommendations range from up to 16 hours daily for babies to at least eight hours for teens. They come from a panel of experts and give parents fresh ammunition for when kids blame them for strict bedtimes.

The guidelines released Monday are the first-ever for children from the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. They encompass recommendations the American Academy of Pediatrics has made at different times for different ages.

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According to the guidelines: Adequate sleep is linked with improved attention, behavior, learning, mental and physical health at every age covered. And insufficient sleep increases risks for obesity, diabetes, accidents, depression and in teens, self-harm including suicide attempts.

The recommendations are based on a review of scientific evidence on sleep duration and health.

Recommended daily/nightly sleep duration is:

—12 hours to 16 hours including naps for infants aged 4 months to 12 months. Younger infants aren’t included because they have a wide range of normal sleep patterns.

—11 to 14 hours including naps for children aged 1- to 2 years.

—10 to 13 hours including naps for children aged 3 to 5 years.

—9 to 12 hours for children aged 6 to 12 years.

—8 to 10 hours for teens aged 13 to 18 years.

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Online:

American Academy of Sleep Medicine:  https://www.aasmnet.org

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