Center for Sleep and Circadian Neurobiology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, United States.
Accid Anal Prev. 2013 Oct;59:618-22. doi: 10.1016/j.aap.2013.07.028. Epub 2013 Jul 31.
Experimental sleep restriction increases sleepiness and impairs driving performance. However, it is unclear whether short sleep duration in the general population is associated with drowsy driving. The goal of the present study was to evaluate whether individuals in the general population who obtained sleep of 6h or less are more likely to report drowsy driving, and evaluate the role of perceived sleep sufficiency. Data exploring whether subgroups of short sleepers (those who report the most or least unmet sleep need) show different risk profiles for drowsy driving are limited. From the 2009 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (N=31,522), we obtained the following self-reported data: (1) sleep duration (≤5, 6, 7, 8, 9, or ≥10 h/night); (2) number of days/week of perceived insufficient sleep; (3) among drivers, yes/no response to: "During the past 30 days, have you ever nodded off or fallen asleep, even just for a brief moment, while driving?" (4) demographics, physical/mental health. Using 7 h/night as reference, logistic regression analyses evaluated whether self-reported sleep duration was associated with drowsy driving. Overall, 3.6% reported drowsy driving. Self-identified short-sleepers reported drowsy driving more often, and long sleepers, less often. Among those who perceived sleep as always insufficient, drowsy driving was reported more often when sleep duration was ≤5 h, 6 h, or ≥10 h. Among those who perceived sleep as always sufficient, drowsy driving was reported more often among ≤5 h and 6h sleepers. Overall, drowsy driving was common, particularly in self-identified short-sleepers as a whole, as well as subgroups based on sleep insufficiency.
实验性睡眠限制会增加困意并损害驾驶表现。然而,目前尚不清楚一般人群中的短睡眠时间是否与困倦驾驶有关。本研究的目的是评估一般人群中睡眠时间少于 6 小时的个体是否更有可能报告困倦驾驶,并评估感知睡眠充足程度的作用。目前,关于短睡眠者亚组(报告最多或最少未满足睡眠需求的人)是否表现出不同的困倦驾驶风险特征的数据有限。从 2009 年行为风险因素监测系统(N=31522)中,我们获得了以下自我报告的数据:(1)睡眠时间(≤5、6、7、8、9 或≥10 小时/夜);(2)感知睡眠不足的天数/周数;(3)在司机中,是否回答:“在过去 30 天内,您在开车时是否曾经打过瞌睡或入睡,即使只是短暂的片刻?”(4)人口统计学,身体/心理健康。使用 7 小时/夜作为参考,逻辑回归分析评估自我报告的睡眠时间是否与困倦驾驶有关。总体而言,有 3.6%的人报告了困倦驾驶。自我认定的短睡眠者更频繁地报告困倦驾驶,而长睡眠者则较少。在那些认为睡眠总是不足的人中,当睡眠时间≤5 小时、6 小时或≥10 小时时,报告困倦驾驶的频率更高。在那些认为睡眠总是充足的人中,报告困倦驾驶的频率更高的是睡眠时间≤5 小时和 6 小时的人。总体而言,困倦驾驶很常见,尤其是在自我认定的短睡眠者中,以及基于睡眠不足的亚组中。