Home / Health / Weekend Sleep Boosts Teen Mental Health
Weekend Sleep Boosts Teen Mental Health
10 Jan
Summary
- Weekend sleep recovery lowers depressive symptoms by 41%.
- Study analyzed teens and young adults aged 16 to 24.
- Catch-up sleep offers a low-cost alternative to other interventions.

A recent study indicates that teenagers and young adults can significantly reduce their risk of depressive symptoms by utilizing weekend sleep to compensate for weekday deficits. The research, involving participants aged 16 to 24, found a 41% lower risk of depression among those who caught up on sleep during weekends.
Published in the Journal of Affective Disorders, the study highlights that weekend recovery sleep is associated with reduced depression symptoms, even after accounting for total sleep duration and other variables. This suggests that while consistent, adequate sleep is ideal, weekend catch-up can offer a degree of protection.
This finding is particularly relevant as many adolescents struggle with maintaining regular sleep schedules due to biological rhythms and external factors. Experts suggest that allowing teens to sleep in on weekends provides a practical, low-cost mental health strategy, potentially complementing efforts like later school start times.



