Grandner Michael A, Smith Tony E, Jackson Nicholas, Jackson Tara, Burgard Sarah, Branas Charles
Department of Psychiatry, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA; Center for Sleep and Circadian Neurobiology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA; Department of Psychiatry, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ.
Department of Electrical Systems Engineering, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Sleep Health. 2015 Sep 1;1(3):158-165. doi: 10.1016/j.sleh.2015.06.003.
Insufficient sleep is associated with cardiometabolic risk and neurocognitive impairment. Determinants of insufficient sleep include many social and environmental factors. Assessment of geographic hot/coldspots may uncover novel risk groups and/or targets for public health intervention. The aim of this study was to discern geographic patterns in the first data set to include county-level sleep data.
The 2009 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System was used. Insufficient sleep was assessed with a survey item and dichotomized. Data from n = 2231 counties were available. Tests for significant spatial concentrations of high/low levels of insufficient sleep (hotspots/coldspots) used the Getis-Ord G* statistic of local spatial concentration, chosen due to the nature of missing data.
Eighty-four counties were hotspots, with high levels of insufficient sleep ( < .01), and 45 were coldspots, with low insufficient sleep ( < .01). Hotspots were found in Alabama (1 county), Arkansas (1), Georgia (1), Illinois (1), Kentucky (25), Louisiana (1), Missouri (4), Ohio (7), Tennessee (12), Texas (9), Virginia (6), and West Virginia (16). Coldspots were found in Alabama (1 county), Georgia (2), Illinois (6), Iowa (6), Michigan (2), Minnesota (1), North Carolina (1), Texas (7), Virginia (12), and Wisconsin (6). Several contiguous hotspots and coldspots were evident. Notably, the 17 counties with the highest levels of insufficient sleep were found in a contiguous set at the intersection of Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia (all < .0002).
Geographic distribution of insufficient sleep in the United States is uneven. Some areas (most notably parts of Appalachia) experience disproportionately high amounts of insufficient sleep and may be targets of intervention. Further investigation of determinants of geographic variability needs to be explored, which would enhance the utility of these data for development of public health campaigns.
睡眠不足与心血管代谢风险及神经认知障碍有关。睡眠不足的决定因素包括许多社会和环境因素。评估地理热点/冷点可能会发现新的风险群体和/或公共卫生干预目标。本研究的目的是在首个包含县级睡眠数据的数据集中识别地理模式。
使用了2009年行为危险因素监测系统。通过一项调查项目评估睡眠不足情况并进行二分法分类。有来自n = 2231个县的数据。使用局部空间集聚的Getis-Ord G*统计量对睡眠不足高/低水平的显著空间集聚(热点/冷点)进行检验,选择该统计量是由于缺失数据的性质。
84个县为热点,睡眠不足水平较高(<0.01),45个县为冷点,睡眠不足水平较低(<0.01)。热点出现在阿拉巴马州(1个县)、阿肯色州(1个)、佐治亚州(1个)、伊利诺伊州(1个)、肯塔基州(25个)、路易斯安那州(1个)、密苏里州(4个)、俄亥俄州(7个)、田纳西州(12个)、得克萨斯州(9个)、弗吉尼亚州(6个)和西弗吉尼亚州(16个)。冷点出现在阿拉巴马州(1个县)、佐治亚州(2个)、伊利诺伊州(6个)、爱荷华州(6个)、密歇根州(2个)、明尼苏达州(1个)、北卡罗来纳州(1个)、得克萨斯州(7个)、弗吉尼亚州(12个)和威斯康星州(6个)。明显有几个相邻的热点和冷点。值得注意的是,睡眠不足水平最高的17个县在肯塔基州、田纳西州、弗吉尼亚州和西弗吉尼亚州的交界处相邻分布(均<0.0002)。
美国睡眠不足的地理分布不均衡。一些地区(最显著的是阿巴拉契亚部分地区)睡眠不足的情况异常严重,可能是干预目标。需要进一步探究地理差异的决定因素,这将提高这些数据在开展公共卫生运动方面的效用。