Abstract:
Sleep issues and mood disorders, such as anxiety and depression, pose significant obstacles for college
students. According to secondary data syntheses, approximately 33% of students have clinically significant
sleep problems, while 34% and 32%, respectively, have anxiety and depression symptoms. These numbers,
which come from extensive meta-analyses with up to 1.4 million individuals, highlight how pervasive these
issues are.
There are moderate correlations between psychological discomfort (r = 0.39) and poor sleep quality, as
determined by standardized tools such as the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). It is noteworthy that
evening chronotype, or "night owl" tendencies, shows weak but consistent associations with depression
(Fisher's z ≈ –0.20). These effects are exacerbated when social jet lag (≥2 hours difference between weekday
and weekend sleep timing) is added, increasing the risk of depression by almost five to six times.
The bidirectional association between sleep and mood is further clarified by longitudinal studies, which show
that baseline mood disorders predict decreasing sleep over time, while poor sleep quality predicts subsequent
increases in stress, anxiety, and depression (standardized β = 0.26–0.32). Important variables include
resilience and circadian alignment: while greater social jet lag exacerbates sleep-mood dysfunction, greater
resilience reduces it.
Emotional dysregulation and circadian misalignment serve as the mechanistic foundation for these
occurrences. Evening chronotypes frequently experience social jet lag, or a discrepancy between their
biological and social clocks, which leads to long-term sleep deprivation and mental instability. Prefrontal–
amygdala connection is weakened by inadequate sleep, which results in emotional reactivity, decreased
positive affect, and trouble making decisions.
Secondary sources of intervention data indicate that sleep and mental health outcomes can be significantly
improved by lowering nighttime screen use, encouraging sleep hygiene, developing resilience through
emotion control and mindfulness, and adjusting schedules to chronotype.
Notwithstanding strong secondary findings, there are a number of drawbacks, such as study variability, the
use of self-report measures, and the dearth of thorough randomized trials. The testing of chronotype-specific and resilience-building therapies, wearable sleep tracking, and longitudinal and experimental designs must be
the top priorities of future research.
Secondary studies continuously show that stress and circadian misalignment are the main causes of the high
prevalence and interconnectivity of mood disorders and sleep problems among college students. Circadian-
aware scheduling, resilience building, and lifestyle modifications backed by institutional policy are necessary
to mitigate these problems.