Department of Deployment Health Research, Naval Health Research Center, San Diego, CA 92106-3521, USA.
Sleep. 2010 Dec;33(12):1615-22. doi: 10.1093/sleep/33.12.1615.
To determine the associations between deployment in support of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and sleep quantity and quality.
Longitudinal cohort study
The Millennium Cohort Study survey is administered via a secure website or US mail.
Data were from 41,225 Millennium Cohort members who completed baseline (2001-2003) and follow-up (2004-2006) surveys. Participants were placed into 1 of 3 exposure groups based on their deployment status at follow-up: nondeployed, survey completed during deployment, or survey completed postdeployment.
N/A.
Study outcomes were self-reported sleep duration and trouble sleeping, defined as having trouble falling asleep or staying asleep. Adjusted mean sleep duration was significantly shorter among those in the deployed and postdeployment groups compared with those who did not deploy. Additionally, male gender and greater stress were significantly associated with shorter sleep duration. Personnel who completed their survey during deployment or postdeployment were significantly more likely to have trouble sleeping than those who had not deployed. Lower self-reported general health, female gender, and reporting of mental health symptoms at baseline were also significantly associated with increased odds of trouble sleeping.
Deployment significantly influenced sleep quality and quantity in this population though effect size was mediated with statistical modeling that included mental health symptoms. Personnel reporting combat exposures or mental health symptoms had increased odds of trouble sleeping. These findings merit further research to increase understanding of temporal relationships between sleep and mental health outcomes occurring during and after deployment.
确定在伊拉克和阿富汗战争中部署与睡眠数量和质量之间的关联。
纵向队列研究
千禧年队列研究调查通过安全网站或美国邮件进行管理。
数据来自 41225 名完成基线(2001-2003 年)和随访(2004-2006 年)调查的千禧年队列成员。根据他们在随访时的部署状态,参与者被分为 3 个暴露组之一:未部署、在部署期间完成调查或在部署后完成调查。
无。
研究结果是自我报告的睡眠时间和睡眠问题,定义为入睡困难或保持睡眠困难。与未部署的人相比,部署中和部署后的人调整后的平均睡眠时间明显更短。此外,男性性别和更大的压力与睡眠时间更短显著相关。在部署期间或部署后完成调查的人员比未部署的人员更有可能出现睡眠问题。较低的自我报告一般健康状况、女性性别以及在基线时报告心理健康症状也与睡眠问题的几率增加显著相关。
在该人群中,部署显著影响睡眠质量和数量,尽管通过包括心理健康症状在内的统计模型进行中介,效应大小有所降低。报告战斗暴露或心理健康症状的人员出现睡眠问题的几率增加。这些发现值得进一步研究,以增加对在部署期间和之后发生的睡眠与心理健康结果之间的时间关系的理解。