Swiss Teens Sleep Longer, Score Better with Evening Phone Ban
University of Geneva study reveals 40-minute sleep increase and improved academic performance when teenagers restrict evening smartphone use.
University of Geneva study reveals 40-minute sleep increase and improved academic performance when teenagers restrict evening smartphone use.

"Parents therefore play a key role. Their involvement directly influences the health and success of their children."
"Every week, this gain of 40 minutes is almost equivalent to an extra nightâs sleep."
Forty minutes. That is the staggering difference between a well-rested student and a sleep-deprived one, according to a groundbreaking study by the University of Geneva. In a digital era where attention spans are plummeting, Swiss researchers have uncovered a critical link: teenagers who are physically separated from their smartphones at night sleep significantly longer and, crucially, outperform their peers academically.
Published in the journal Discover Public Health, the research analyzed the habits of over 300 schoolchildren aged 13 to 15. The data is unequivocal. Students subject to strict evening bansâwhere the device is banned from the bedroom entirelyâgain an average of 40 minutes of sleep every single night. This is not a marginal increase; it is a physiological game-changer that directly correlates with higher grades. While educators have long suspected a connection, this study provides the hard evidence needed to justify strict intervention. The message to Swiss families is loud and clear: the path to academic success begins with a disconnected bedroom.
Weak rules are useless. The University of Geneva's findings dismantle the popular notion that "limiting" screen time is sufficient. The study reveals a stark contrast: while total physical removal of the device yields dramatic results, other restrictionsâsuch as setting a curfew time or capping daily usage hoursâhave absolutely no significant impact on sleep duration. If the phone is in the room, the sleep is compromised.
"The introduction of a rule requiring the physical removal of electronic screen devices from the bedroom is associated with longer sleep duration," the researchers assert. This finding challenges the "soft" parenting approach of negotiation. The mere presence of the device, even if unused, appears to act as a psychological tether, disrupting the ability to fully disengage. For Swiss teenagers, the data suggests an all-or-nothing reality: either the phone leaves the room, or the sleep deficit remains. The correlation extends to the classroom, where pupils under strict regimes consistently achieved superior marks compared to those navigating vague usage limits.
A staggering cumulative advantage emerges when you do the math. Virginie Sterpenich, the study leader, puts the data into a startling perspective: "Every week, this gain of 40 minutes is almost equivalent to an extra nightâs sleep." In a biological landscape where teenagers require approximately 9 hours of rest but typically scrape by on 7 to 8, this intervention is critical.
This is not merely about feeling less groggy; it is about closing a dangerous health gap. The 13-to-15-year-old demographic is currently grappling with a chronic sleep crisis that threatens both mental and physical development. By reclaiming nearly five hours of sleep per week through a simple household rule, families can effectively reverse this trend. The study highlights that the deficit is not inevitableâit is a byproduct of accessible technology. By severing the digital connection at night, the biological rhythm is restored, allowing the teenage brain the necessary recovery time to process information and regenerate.
The responsibility now falls squarely on parents. "Parents therefore play a key role. Their involvement directly influences the health and success of their children," states Kevin Mammeri, the study's lead author. The science has handed guardians a mandate: intervention is not an intrusion, but a health necessity. This aligns with a broader cultural shift sweeping through Switzerland, exemplified by Geneva's recent decision to completely ban mobile phones in secondary schools.
As educational institutions tighten restrictions, the domestic sphere must mirror these boundaries to maximize the benefit. The synergy between school policies and home enforcement creates a consistent environment where the teenager can thrive. While the digital age offers unprecedented connectivity, this research confirms that the most valuable connection a teenager can make is with their own sleep cycle. For Swiss parents, the evidence is in: taking the phone away is one of the most academically supportive actions they can take.