Chen Jen-Hao, Lauderdale Diane S, Waite Linda J
Department of Health Sciences and Harry S. Truman School of Public Affairs, University of Missouri, 501 Clark Hall, Columbia, MO 65211, USA.
Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Chicago, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2016 Jan;149:164-73. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.11.045. Epub 2015 Nov 30.
Sleep complaints are common among older adults, and poor sleep has been found to predict chronic diseases and mortality. Many studies suggest that social participation benefits healthy aging. We examined the relationships between older adults' social participation and their sleep using two waves (2005-2006, 2010-2011) of data from the National Social Life, Health, and Aging Project (NSHAP). The NSHAP recorded older adults' social participation (including religious attendance, volunteer work, and attendance at meetings of organized groups) over five years, and included self-reported sleep duration in both waves and, in the second wave, measures of insomnia symptoms and measures of sleep patterns and rhythms using actigraphy for a subsample. Cross-sectional analysis of the second wave indicates that those reporting higher levels of social participation had better actigraphic sleep but not better self-reported sleep. However, longitudinal analysis suggests that change in social participation was not associated with actigraphic or self-reported sleep characteristics in the second wave data. Further analysis using fixed-effects model showed no association between change in social participation and change in self-reported sleep duration. Thus, although older adults with greater social participation slept better, we did not find that increasing social participation improved sleep. These findings imply that a self-selection process may at work; or if social participation does affect sleep, the causal effect may be over a much shorter time frame than five years.
睡眠问题在老年人中很常见,而且睡眠不佳已被发现可预测慢性疾病和死亡率。许多研究表明,社会参与有益于健康老龄化。我们利用来自国家社会生活、健康与老龄化项目(NSHAP)的两波数据(2005 - 2006年、2010 - 2011年),研究了老年人的社会参与与其睡眠之间的关系。NSHAP记录了老年人五年间的社会参与情况(包括宗教活动参与、志愿工作以及参加有组织团体的会议),并且在两波数据中都纳入了自我报告的睡眠时间,在第二波数据中,还针对一个子样本使用活动记录仪测量了失眠症状以及睡眠模式和节律。对第二波数据的横断面分析表明,报告社会参与水平较高的人活动记录仪记录的睡眠状况较好,但自我报告的睡眠情况并非如此。然而,纵向分析表明,在第二波数据中,社会参与的变化与活动记录仪记录的或自我报告的睡眠特征无关。使用固定效应模型的进一步分析表明,社会参与的变化与自我报告的睡眠时间变化之间没有关联。因此,尽管社会参与度较高的老年人睡眠更好,但我们并未发现增加社会参与能改善睡眠。这些发现意味着可能存在自我选择过程在起作用;或者如果社会参与确实影响睡眠,其因果效应可能发生在比五年短得多的时间范围内。