Methodology Center, Edna Bennett Pierce Prevention Research Center, Pennsylvania State University, 404 Health and Human Development Building, University Park, PA, 16802, USA.
Center on Young Adult Health and Development, Department of Behavioral and Community Health, University of Maryland, 4200 Valley Dr, #1234, College Park, MD, 20742, USA.
Int J Behav Med. 2021 Feb;28(1):21-28. doi: 10.1007/s12529-020-09867-8.
There are high levels of stress among graduate students, and stress is associated with multiple negative outcomes among student populations, including academic burnout. Sleep could play an important role in explaining the association between stress and burnout, but these relationships have not been explored among the graduate student population. The current study assessed whether or not sleep duration and quality moderated the relationship between stress and burnout (i.e., exhaustion, cynicism, and inefficacy) among graduate students.
A sample of 2683 master's, doctoral, and professional graduate students from two large, public universities completed an online survey. Linear regression models with interaction terms were developed to evaluate the relationships between stress and burnout while examining moderation by sleep duration and quality.
Participants slept an average of 6.4 h per night, with 62% indicating good sleep quality. Stress had significant, positive relationships with exhaustion, cynicism, and inefficacy. The relationship between stress and exhaustion lessened as sleep duration increased, and the relationship between stress and exhaustion was weaker among students with good sleep quality when compared with those with poor sleep quality. Neither sleep duration nor sleep quality moderated the relationships between stress and cynicism or stress and inefficacy.
Improving sleep habits has the potential to lessen the negative association between stress and graduate student functioning. Future research utilizing longitudinal designs is needed to understand the temporality of these associations and the influence of possible co-factors like individual propensity for mental health problems and social support.
研究生群体的压力水平较高,压力与学生群体的多种负面后果相关,包括学业倦怠。睡眠可能在解释压力与倦怠(即疲惫、玩世不恭和无效)之间的关系方面发挥重要作用,但这些关系尚未在研究生群体中得到探索。本研究评估了睡眠时长和质量是否调节了研究生压力与倦怠(即疲惫、玩世不恭和无效)之间的关系。
来自两所大型公立大学的 2683 名硕士、博士和专业研究生完成了一项在线调查。线性回归模型与交互项一起被开发出来,以评估压力与倦怠之间的关系,同时检查睡眠时长和质量的调节作用。
参与者平均每晚睡眠 6.4 小时,62%的人表示睡眠质量良好。压力与疲惫、玩世不恭和无效呈显著正相关。随着睡眠时长的增加,压力与疲惫之间的关系减弱,与睡眠质量差的学生相比,睡眠质量好的学生压力与疲惫之间的关系较弱。睡眠时长和睡眠质量都没有调节压力与玩世不恭或压力与无效之间的关系。
改善睡眠习惯有可能减轻压力与研究生功能之间的负面关联。需要利用纵向设计的未来研究来了解这些关联的时间性以及心理健康问题的个体倾向和社会支持等可能的共同因素的影响。