Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Womens Health Issues. 2012 Jan-Feb;22(1):e99-109. doi: 10.1016/j.whi.2011.07.004. Epub 2011 Aug 27.
This study examined psychological and sociodemographic predictors of self-reported sleep characteristics including sleep duration, quality, and perceived adequacy of sleep among Hispanic and non-Hispanic women of low socioeconomic status.
Cross-sectional survey data were analyzed from 2,670 women ages 18 to 55 (74% Hispanic, 18% non-Hispanic White, 8% non-Hispanic Black) participating in a cancer prevention study in southeast Texas.
Women reported sleeping 7.1 hours per night on average; however, nearly 45% were short (≤6; 35.3%) or long (≥9; 9.5%) sleepers. Sleep quality was rated less than "good" for 43.7% of the total sample, and 22.5% reported adequate sleep "none" or "a little" of the time. Multivariable analyses identified different demographic and psychological predictors for the sleep characteristics; decreased sleep adequacy was associated with parity, depressive symptoms, stress, and anxiety (R(2) = 0.11); short sleep duration with age, education, and depressive symptoms (R(2) = 0.07); and poor sleep quality with ethnicity, marital and employment status, public housing accommodation, smoking status, income, acculturation, social desirability, depressive symptoms, stress, and anxiety (R(2) = 0.18). Separate analyses of the Hispanic subsample born in the United States versus elsewhere revealed differences in all sleep characteristics. In multivariable analyses, similar predictors of sleep quality and duration emerged, but only depressive symptoms, anxiety, and age were associated with sleep adequacy.
Women of lower socioeconomic groups and Hispanic ethnicity may suffer poor quality sleep. A complex and distinct array of factors are associated with sleep quality, duration, and adequacy. The relationship between sleep and health and the growing U.S. Hispanic population highlight the importance of this and future research.
本研究旨在探讨心理和社会人口学因素对自我报告的睡眠特征的预测作用,这些特征包括低社会经济地位的西班牙裔和非西班牙裔女性的睡眠持续时间、质量和睡眠充足感。
对 2670 名年龄在 18 至 55 岁之间(74%为西班牙裔,18%为非西班牙裔白种人,8%为非西班牙裔黑人)的女性进行了横断面调查,这些女性参与了德克萨斯州东南部的一项癌症预防研究。
女性平均每晚报告睡眠时间为 7.1 小时;然而,近 45%的人睡眠时间较短(≤6 小时;35.3%)或较长(≥9 小时;9.5%)。总样本中有 43.7%的人睡眠质量被评为“不好”,22.5%的人报告睡眠时间“很少”或“一点”。多变量分析确定了不同的人口统计学和心理因素对睡眠特征的预测作用;睡眠充足感降低与产次、抑郁症状、压力和焦虑有关(R²=0.11);短睡眠时间与年龄、教育程度和抑郁症状有关(R²=0.07);睡眠质量差与种族、婚姻和就业状况、公共住房、吸烟状况、收入、文化适应、社会期望、抑郁症状、压力和焦虑有关(R²=0.18)。对出生于美国和其他地方的西班牙裔亚组进行的单独分析显示,所有睡眠特征都存在差异。在多变量分析中,睡眠质量和持续时间的相似预测因素出现,但只有抑郁症状、焦虑和年龄与睡眠充足感有关。
社会经济地位较低的女性和西班牙裔女性可能睡眠质量较差。睡眠质量、持续时间和充足感与一系列复杂而独特的因素有关。睡眠与健康的关系以及不断增长的美国西班牙裔人口突显了这项研究和未来研究的重要性。