Division of Population Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 4770 Buford Highway NE, Mailstop K-67, Atlanta, GA 30041, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2013 Jan 3;13:3. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-3.
Although adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have previously been demonstrated to be adversely associated with a variety of health outcomes in adulthood, their specific association with sleep among adults has not been examined. To better address this issue, this study examines the relationship between eight self-reported ACEs and frequent insufficient sleep among community-dwelling adults residing in 5 U.S. states in 2009.
To assess whether ACEs were associated with frequent insufficient sleep (respondent did not get sufficient rest or sleep ≥ 14 days in past 30 days) in adulthood, we analyzed ACE data collected in the 2009 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, a random-digit-dialed telephone survey in Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Tennessee, and Washington. ACEs included physical abuse, sexual abuse, verbal abuse, household mental illness, incarcerated household members, household substance abuse, parental separation/divorce, and witnessing domestic violence before age 18. Smoking status and frequent mental distress (FMD) (≥ 14 days in past 30 days when self-perceived mental health was not good) were assessed as potential mediators in multivariate logistic regression analyses of frequent insufficient sleep by ACEs adjusted for race/ethnicity, gender, education, and body mass index.
Overall, 28.8% of 25,810 respondents reported frequent insufficient sleep, 18.8% were current smokers, 10.8% reported frequent mental distress, 59.5% percent reported ≥ 1 ACE, and 8.7% reported ≥ 5 ACEs. Each ACE was associated with frequent insufficient sleep in multivariate analyses. Odds of frequent insufficient sleep were 2.5 (95% CI, 2.1-3.1) times higher in persons with ≥ 5 ACEs compared to those with no ACEs. Most relationships were modestly attenuated by smoking and FMD, but remained significant.
Childhood exposures to eight indicators of child maltreatment and household dysfunction were significantly associated with frequent insufficient sleep during adulthood in this population. ACEs could be potential indicators promoting further investigation of sleep insufficiency, along with consideration of FMD and smoking.
尽管先前已有研究表明,不良的童年经历(ACEs)与成年后各种健康结果之间存在不利关联,但 ACEs 与成年人睡眠之间的具体关联尚未得到检验。为了更好地解决这个问题,本研究考察了 2009 年居住在美国 5 个州的社区成年人中,8 种自我报告的 ACEs 与频繁睡眠不足之间的关系。
为了评估 ACEs 是否与成年人中频繁睡眠不足(受访者在过去 30 天内没有得到足够的休息或睡眠≥14 天)有关,我们分析了 2009 年行为风险因素监测系统中收集的 ACE 数据,这是一项在阿肯色州、路易斯安那州、新墨西哥州、田纳西州和华盛顿州进行的随机数字拨号电话调查。ACEs 包括身体虐待、性虐待、言语虐待、家庭精神疾病、家庭成员入狱、家庭药物滥用、父母离异/离婚以及 18 岁前目睹家庭暴力。吸烟状况和频繁的心理困扰(FMD)(过去 30 天内自我感知心理健康状况不佳的天数≥14 天)被评估为 ACE 对频繁睡眠不足的多变量逻辑回归分析中的潜在中介因素,这些分析调整了种族/民族、性别、教育和体重指数。
总体而言,25810 名受访者中,28.8%报告频繁睡眠不足,18.8%为当前吸烟者,10.8%报告频繁的心理困扰,59.5%报告≥1 个 ACE,8.7%报告≥5 个 ACE。在多变量分析中,每种 ACE 都与频繁睡眠不足有关。与没有 ACE 的人相比,有≥5 个 ACE 的人频繁睡眠不足的几率高 2.5 倍(95%CI,2.1-3.1)。吸烟和 FMD 适度减弱了大多数关系,但仍具有统计学意义。
在该人群中,童年时期经历的 8 种儿童虐待和家庭功能障碍指标与成年后频繁睡眠不足显著相关。ACEs 可能是促进进一步研究睡眠不足的潜在指标,同时考虑 FMD 和吸烟状况。