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Some schools are teaching teens how to sleep amid growing mental health crisis

Some schools are teaching teens how to sleep amid growing mental health crisis

Yahoo17-04-2025

The Brief
Schools in Ohio and Minnesota are now teaching teens how to sleep as part of health class
Research shows sleep is closely tied to teen mental health, behavior and academic success
Most teens sleep less than 6 hours, far below the 8–10 hours recommended
MANSFIELD, Ohio - Some school districts are introducing an unexpected topic to their high school curriculum: how to sleep.
In Mansfield, Ohio, and several Minnesota schools, educators are piloting sleep education programs aimed at helping teens get more rest—and, they hope, improve behavior, attendance, and mental health outcomes in the process. The initiative, reported by the Associated Press, is part of a growing response to what experts have called an adolescent sleep crisis.
The backstory
At Mansfield Senior High School, health teacher Tony Davis has incorporated a new sleep curriculum into a required health class, according to reporting by the Associated Press. The six-part course, called "Sleep to Be a Better You," was designed to help students understand the importance of sleep and build better nighttime habits.
"Sleep training" has long been associated with babies—but educators and health researchers are increasingly focused on teenagers, whose circadian rhythms shift during puberty, causing natural sleep delays. The CDC reports that nearly 80% of teens get less than the recommended 8–10 hours of sleep per night.
As the AP notes, the Mansfield program was launched in response to a high rate of absenteeism—still at 32% in the district, despite a drop from 44% in 2021—and parent surveys that pointed to widespread sleep struggles.
Why you should care
Experts cited by the AP emphasize that sleep is closely linked to teen mental health, emotional regulation, and academic performance.
Denise Pope, a senior lecturer at Stanford, told the Associated Press that teen exhaustion is visible in classrooms nationwide: "Walk into any high school in America and you will see kids asleep. Whether it's on a desk, outside on the ground or on a bench … because they are exhausted."
Research referenced in the AP's reporting points to reduced activity in the brain's prefrontal cortex when sleep-deprived, paired with increased amygdala activity—the part of the brain that processes fear, anxiety, and anger.
The result: more impulsive behavior, lower focus, and greater vulnerability to depression or self-harm.
What's next
The Mansfield course, developed by a University of Minnesota researcher, encourages students to track sleep and mood, keep bedtime routines, and reduce late-night phone use. One freshman, Nathan Baker, told the Associated Press that the class changed his habits—shifting him away from screens before bed and toward calming music.
"Life is so much more simple," Baker said, after improving his sleep from five hours to seven hours a night.
The AP also reported on sophomore Amelia Raphael and senior Chase Cole—two high-achieving Mansfield students juggling academics, sports, and extracurriculars—who said they regularly sacrifice sleep due to packed schedules and the pressure to succeed.
Even with growing awareness, many teens still rely on phones as alarm clocks and fall asleep with devices in hand—habits health officials have warned against for years.
What they're saying
Tony Davis told the Associated Press he was surprised by how many of his students didn't know basic sleep strategies. "It might sound odd to say that kids in high school have to learn the skills to sleep," he said, "but you'd be shocked how many just don't know how to sleep."
UCLA psychiatry professor Andrew Fuligni told the AP that sleep deserves more attention in conversations about teen mental health. "The evidence linking sleep and mental health is a lot tighter, more causal, than the evidence for social media and mental health," Fuligni said.
Kyla Wahlstrom, a University of Minnesota expert who helped develop the curriculum, added that teenagers often show sleep deprivation in subtle but familiar ways. "Teenagers have meltdowns, too, because they're tired," she told the AP. "But they do it in more age-appropriate ways."
The Source
This article is based on reporting from the Associated Press, which interviewed students and educators at Mansfield Senior High School in Ohio and cited research from health and sleep experts.

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ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia's experiment with a work requirement for Medicaid offers a test of a similar mandate Republicans in Congress want to implement nationally, and advocates say the results so far should serve as a warning. Just days shy of its two-year anniversary, the Georgia Medicaid program is providing health coverage to about 7,500 low-income residents, up from 4,300 in the first year , but far fewer than the estimated 240,000 people who could qualify. The state had predicted at least 25,000 enrollees in the first year and nearly 50,000 in the second year. Applicants and beneficiaries have faced technical glitches and found it nearly impossible at times to reach staff for help, despite more than $50 million in federal and state spending on computer software and administration. The program, dubbed Georgia Pathways, had a backlog of more than 16,000 applications 14 months after its July 2023 launch , according to a renewal application Georgia submitted to the Trump administration in April. 'The data on the Pathways program speaks for itself,' said Laura Colbert, executive director of Georgians for a Healthy Future, an advocacy group that has called for a broader expansion of Medicaid without work requirements. 'There are just so many hurdles at every step of the way that it's just a really difficult program for people to enroll in and then to stay enrolled in too.' Georgia's rules A tax and spending bill backed by President Donald Trump and Republican lawmakers that passed the U.S. House in May would require many able-bodied Medicaid enrollees under 65 to show that they work, volunteer or go to school. The bill is now in the Senate, where Republicans want significant changes. Pathways requires beneficiaries to perform 80 hours a month of work, volunteer activity, schooling or vocational rehabilitation. It's the only Medicaid program in the nation with a work requirement. But Georgia recently stopped checking each month whether beneficiaries were meeting the mandate. Colbert and other advocates view that as evidence that state staff was overburdened with reviewing proof-of-work documents. Fiona Roberts, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Community Health, said Gov. Brian Kemp has mandated that state agencies 'continually seek ways to make government more efficient and accessible.' Georgia's governor defends Pathways The governor's office defended the enrollment numbers. Kemp spokesman Garrison Douglas said the early projections for Pathways were made in 2019, when the state had a much larger pool of uninsured residents who could qualify for the program. In a statement, Douglas credited the Republican governor with bringing that number down significantly through 'historic job growth,' and said the decline in uninsured residents proved 'the governor's plan to address our healthcare needs is working.' For BeShea Terry, Pathways was a 'godsend.' After going without insurance for more than a year, Terry, 51, said Pathways allowed her to get a mammogram and other screening tests. Terry touts Pathways in a video on the program's website. But in a phone interview with The Associated Press, she said she also experienced problems. Numerous times, she received erroneous messages that she hadn't uploaded proof of her work hours. Then in December, her coverage was abruptly canceled — a mistake that took months of calls to a caseworker and visits to a state office to resolve, she said. 'It's a process,' she said. 'Keep continuing to call because your health is very important.' Health advocates say many low-income Americans may not have the time or resources. They are often struggling with food and housing needs. They are also more likely to have limited access to the internet and work informal jobs that don't produce pay stubs. Republican lawmakers have promoted work requirements as a way to boost employment, but most Medicaid recipients already work, and the vast majority who don't are in school, caring for someone, or sick or disabled. Kemp's administration has defended Pathways as a way to transition people to private health care. At least 1,000 people have left the program and obtained private insurance because their income increased, according to the governor's office. After a slow start , advertising and outreach efforts for Pathways have picked up over the last year. At a job fair in Atlanta on Thursday, staff handed out information about the program at a table with mints, hand sanitizer and other swag with the Pathways' logo. A wheel that people could spin for a prize sat on one end. Since Pathways imposed the work requirement only on newly eligible state residents, no one lost coverage. The Arkansas experiment That's a contrast with Arkansas, where 18,000 people were pushed off Medicaid within the first seven months of a 2018 work mandate that applied to some existing beneficiaries. A federal judge later blocked the requirement . The bill that passed the U.S. House would likely cause an estimated 5.2 million people to lose health coverage, according to an analysis from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office released Wednesday. Arkansas Republican Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders has proposed reviving the work mandate but without requiring people to regularly report employment hours. Instead, the state would rely on existing data to determine enrollees who were not meeting goals for employment and other markers and refer those people to coaches before any decision to suspend them. Arkansas is among at least 10 states pursuing work requirements for their Medicaid programs separate from the effort in Congress. Republican state Sen. Missy Irvin said Arkansas' new initiative aims to understand who the beneficiaries are and what challenges they face. 'We want you to be able to take care of yourself and your family, your loved ones and everybody else,' Irvin said. 'How can we help you? Being a successful individual is a healthy individual.' ___ Associated Press writers Jonathan Mattise in Nashville, Tennessee, Andrew DeMillo in Little Rock, Arkansas, and Geoff Mulvihill in Philadelphia contributed to this report. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? 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