Suarez Elizabeth, Fang Shona C, Bliwise Donald, Yaggi H Klar, Araujo Andre
New England Research Institutes, Inc, Watertown, MA.
New England Research Institutes, Inc, Watertown, MA.
Sleep Health. 2015 Jun;1(2):90-97. doi: 10.1016/j.sleh.2015.02.003. Epub 2015 Mar 20.
Racial/ethnic differences in sleep are widely reported. However, the extent to which socioeconomic factors account for crude variation in sleep parameters by racial/ethnic groups is not clearly understood.
We studied 4144 individuals in the Boston Area Community Health Survey (2006-2010), a racially/ethnically balanced population-based cohort of black, Hispanic, and white men and women. Self-reported sleep measures were sleep duration, sleep latency, restless sleep, risk for sleep apnea, and sleep medication use. We assessed changes in the age- and sex-adjusted association between race/ethnicity and sleep measures after additional adjustment for individual socioeconomic factors (income, education, and employment) and lifestyle and behavioral factors.
Self-identified non-Hispanic black race/ethnicity was significantly associated with higher odds of short sleep duration (fully adjusted odds ratio [OR], 1.93; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.41-2.64), longer sleep latency (fully adjusted, 20.9% longer; 95% CI, 4.1-41.9), and lower odds of pharmaceutical sleep aid use (fully adjusted OR: 0.47, 95% CI: 0.34, 0.65) than white race/ethnicity. Education level accounted for the most substantial reduction in estimates of the age- and sex-adjusted association between black race/ethnicity and short sleep duration and sleep latency. Having less than a 4-year college education was associated with approximately 55% lower sleep latency than having postgraduate education. No significant associations were observed comparing Hispanic to white participants.
Significant variation was observed between black and white race/ethnicity in short sleep duration, sleep latency, and sleep aid use. Although considerable variation in sleep by race/ethnicity was explained by education level, additional variation in self-reported sleep by race/ethnicity may be due to other unmeasured socioeconomic, lifestyle, or behavioral factors.
睡眠方面的种族/民族差异已有广泛报道。然而,社会经济因素在多大程度上解释了不同种族/民族群体睡眠参数的原始差异,目前尚不清楚。
我们在波士顿地区社区健康调查(2006 - 2010年)中研究了4144名个体,这是一个种族/民族均衡的基于人群的队列,包括黑人、西班牙裔和白人男性及女性。自我报告的睡眠指标包括睡眠时间、入睡潜伏期、睡眠不安、睡眠呼吸暂停风险和睡眠药物使用情况。我们评估了在对个体社会经济因素(收入、教育和就业)以及生活方式和行为因素进行额外调整后,种族/民族与睡眠指标之间年龄和性别调整后的关联变化。
自我认定为非西班牙裔黑人种族/民族与睡眠时间短的较高几率显著相关(完全调整后的优势比[OR],1.93;95%置信区间[CI],1.41 - 2.64),入睡潜伏期较长(完全调整后,长20.9%;95% CI,4.1 - 41.9),以及使用药物助眠的几率低于白人种族/民族(完全调整后的OR:0.47,95% CI:0.34,0.65)。教育水平在黑人种族/民族与短睡眠时间和入睡潜伏期之间年龄和性别调整后的关联估计值中占最大幅度的降低。接受不到4年大学教育的人与接受研究生教育的人相比,入睡潜伏期约低55%。在西班牙裔与白人参与者之间未观察到显著关联。
在短睡眠时间、入睡潜伏期和助眠药物使用方面,黑人和白人种族/民族之间存在显著差异。虽然教育水平解释了种族/民族在睡眠方面的相当大差异,但种族/民族在自我报告睡眠方面的额外差异可能归因于其他未测量的社会经济、生活方式或行为因素。