Müller Matthias J, Olschinski Christiane, Kundermann Bernd, Cabanel Nicole
Vitos Clinical Centre for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy Giessen-Marburg, Germany; Justus-Liebig University of Giessen, Giessen, Germany.
Vitos Clinical Centre for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy Giessen-Marburg, Germany.
Sleep Sci. 2016 Jul-Sep;9(3):202-206. doi: 10.1016/j.slsci.2016.08.004. Epub 2016 Sep 16.
Sleep complaints and sleep disturbances are highly prevalent in patients with psychiatric disorders. During hospitalization the patients' condition may be even worse but little is known about the subjective sleep quality in psychiatric hospitals. Thus, we have investigated subjective sleep quality and mean sleep duration in patients with different psychiatric disorders at the end of hospitalization. For a period of one year, inpatients of a psychiatric hospital with diagnosis of substance use disorder (SUD), schizophrenia (SCZ), or anxiety/depressive disorders (AND) were routinely asked to fill in an easily comprehensible sleep quality questionnaire at the end of their hospitalization. Age, gender, subjective sleep quality, and sleep duration were analyzed; sleep duration was classified according to age-specific recommendations. Data of n=309 patients (age 52.1±17.9y, 56.1% women) were analyzed (n=63 SUD, n=50 SCZ, n=196 AND). Mean sleep duration was 7.0±2.0 h; 20.7% of patients had sleep durations below and 4.5% above age-specific recommendations. Non-restorative sleep during hospitalization was reported "almost always" in 38.2% (n=118), and "occasionally" in 30.1% (n=93). Subjective sleep quality was significantly associated with sleep duration ( =-0.31, <0.0005), but not with age, gender or diagnostic subgroup. The study showed that a great proportion of patients reported poor subjective sleep quality during hospitalization, regardless of age, gender and psychiatric diagnosis. As sleep quality was significantly associated with short sleep duration, a first step could be to take care to achieve recommended age-specific sleep durations in psychiatric hospitals.
睡眠问题和睡眠障碍在精神疾病患者中极为普遍。在住院期间,患者的状况可能会更糟,但对于精神病院患者的主观睡眠质量却知之甚少。因此,我们调查了不同精神疾病患者在住院末期的主观睡眠质量和平均睡眠时间。在一年的时间里,一家精神病院的住院患者,被诊断患有物质使用障碍(SUD)、精神分裂症(SCZ)或焦虑/抑郁障碍(AND),在住院结束时被常规要求填写一份易于理解的睡眠质量问卷。分析了年龄、性别、主观睡眠质量和睡眠时间;睡眠时间根据特定年龄的建议进行分类。对n = 309名患者(年龄52.1±17.9岁,女性占56.1%)的数据进行了分析(n = 63名SUD患者,n = 50名SCZ患者,n = 196名AND患者)。平均睡眠时间为7.0±2.0小时;20.7%的患者睡眠时间低于特定年龄建议,4.5%的患者睡眠时间高于特定年龄建议。38.2%(n = 118)的患者报告住院期间“几乎总是”有非恢复性睡眠,30.1%(n = 93)的患者报告“偶尔”有。主观睡眠质量与睡眠时间显著相关(=-0.31,<0.0005),但与年龄、性别或诊断亚组无关。研究表明,很大一部分患者报告住院期间主观睡眠质量较差,无论年龄、性别和精神疾病诊断如何。由于睡眠质量与短睡眠时间显著相关,第一步可以是在精神病院中注意达到特定年龄建议的睡眠时间。