Department of Psychology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia, USA.
J Adolesc Health. 2010 Feb;46(2):124-32. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2009.06.016. Epub 2009 Aug 3.
To characterize sleep patterns and predictors of poor sleep quality in a large population of college students. This study extends the 2006 National Sleep Foundation examination of sleep in early adolescence by examining sleep in older adolescents.
One thousand one hundred twenty-five students aged 17 to 24 years from an urban Midwestern university completed a cross-sectional online survey about sleep habits that included the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), the Epworth Sleepiness Scale, the Horne-Ostberg Morningness-Eveningness Scale, the Profile of Mood States, the Subjective Units of Distress Scale, and questions about academic performance, physical health, and psychoactive drug use.
Students reported disturbed sleep; over 60% were categorized as poor-quality sleepers by the PSQI, bedtimes and risetimes were delayed during weekends, and students reported frequently taking prescription, over the counter, and recreational psychoactive drugs to alter sleep/wakefulness. Students classified as poor-quality sleepers reported significantly more problems with physical and psychological health than did good-quality sleepers. Students overwhelmingly stated that emotional and academic stress negatively impacted sleep. Multiple regression analyses revealed that tension and stress accounted for 24% of the variance in the PSQI score, whereas exercise, alcohol and caffeine consumption, and consistency of sleep schedule were not significant predictors of sleep quality.
These results demonstrate that insufficient sleep and irregular sleep-wake patterns, which have been extensively documented in younger adolescents, are also present at alarming levels in the college student population. Given the close relationships between sleep quality and physical and mental health, intervention programs for sleep disturbance in this population should be considered.
描述大学生这一大众群体中的睡眠模式和睡眠质量差的预测因素。本研究通过检查青少年晚期的睡眠情况,扩展了 2006 年国家睡眠基金会对青少年早期睡眠的研究。
来自中西部城市一所大学的 1125 名 17 至 24 岁的学生完成了一项关于睡眠习惯的横断面在线调查,其中包括匹兹堡睡眠质量指数(PSQI)、嗜睡量表(Epworth Sleepiness Scale)、霍恩-奥斯特伯格晨型/晚型量表(Horne-Ostberg Morningness-Eveningness Scale)、心境状态问卷(Profile of Mood States)、主观痛苦单位量表(Subjective Units of Distress Scale),以及关于学业表现、身体健康和精神活性药物使用的问题。
学生报告睡眠受到干扰;超过 60%的学生根据 PSQI 被归类为睡眠质量差的人,周末的就寝和起床时间延迟,学生报告经常服用处方、非处方和娱乐性精神活性药物来改变睡眠/觉醒状态。被归类为睡眠质量差的学生报告在身体和心理健康方面存在更多问题,明显多于睡眠质量好的学生。学生们压倒性地表示,情绪和学业压力对睡眠产生负面影响。多元回归分析显示,紧张和压力占 PSQI 评分变异的 24%,而运动、酒精和咖啡因的摄入以及睡眠时间表的一致性不是睡眠质量的显著预测因素。
这些结果表明,睡眠不足和不规则的睡眠-觉醒模式在年轻青少年中已被广泛记录,在大学生群体中也以惊人的水平存在。鉴于睡眠质量与身心健康之间的密切关系,应考虑针对该人群的睡眠障碍干预计划。