Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.
J Psychosom Res. 2010 Nov;69(5):459-66. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychores.2010.04.003. Epub 2010 May 20.
Insomnia is a significant public health problem, particularly among older adults. We examined social support as a potential protective factor for sleep among older adults (60 years and older) with insomnia (n=79) and age- and sex-matched controls without insomnia (n=40).
Perceived social support, sleep quality, daytime sleepiness, and napping behavior were assessed via questionnaires or daily diaries. In addition, wrist actigraphy provided a behavioral measure of sleep continuity parameters, including sleep latency (SL), wakefulness after sleep onset (WASO), and total sleep time (TST). Analysis of covariance for continuous outcomes or ordinal logistic regression for categorical outcomes were used to examine the relationship between social support and sleep-wake characteristics and the degree to which observed relationships differed among older adults with insomnia versus non-insomnia controls. Covariates included demographic characteristics, depressive symptoms, and the number of medical comorbidities.
The insomnia group had poorer subjective sleep quality, longer diary-assessed SL and shorter TST as compared to the control group. Higher social support was associated with lesser actigraphy-assessed WASO in both individuals with insomnia and controls. There was a significant patient group by social support interaction for diary-assessed SL, such that higher levels of social support were most associated with shorter sleep latencies in those with insomnia. There were no significant main effects of social support or social support by patient group interactions for subjective sleep quality, daytime sleepiness, napping behavior, or TST (diary or actigraphy assessed).
These findings extend the literature documenting the health benefits of social support, and suggest that social support may similarly influence sleep in individuals with insomnia as well as non-insomnia controls.
失眠是一个重大的公共卫生问题,尤其是在老年人中。我们研究了社会支持作为一种潜在的保护因素,对患有失眠症的老年人(60 岁及以上,n=79)和年龄、性别相匹配的无失眠症对照者(n=40)的睡眠的影响。
通过问卷或每日日记评估感知社会支持、睡眠质量、白天嗜睡和小睡行为。此外,腕部活动记录仪提供了睡眠连续性参数的行为测量,包括睡眠潜伏期(SL)、入睡后觉醒(WASO)和总睡眠时间(TST)。使用协方差分析连续结果或有序逻辑回归分析分类结果,来检查社会支持与睡眠-觉醒特征之间的关系,以及观察到的关系在患有失眠症的老年人与无失眠症对照者之间的差异程度。协变量包括人口统计学特征、抑郁症状和合并症的数量。
与对照组相比,失眠组的主观睡眠质量较差,日记评估的 SL 较长,TST 较短。较高的社会支持与活动记录仪评估的 WASO 减少有关,无论是在患有失眠症的个体还是在对照组中都是如此。在日记评估的 SL 方面,患者组与社会支持的交互作用具有显著意义,即社会支持水平越高,与失眠症患者的睡眠潜伏期越短相关。社会支持或社会支持与患者组之间的交互作用对主观睡眠质量、白天嗜睡、小睡行为或 TST(日记或活动记录仪评估)均无显著主要影响。
这些发现扩展了记录社会支持对健康有益的文献,并表明社会支持可能同样会影响失眠症患者和无失眠症对照者的睡眠。