Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA.
International Epidemiology Field Station, Rockville, MD, USA; Vanderbilt Institute for Clinical and Translational Research, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA.
Sleep Med. 2020 Nov;75:459-467. doi: 10.1016/j.sleep.2020.09.004. Epub 2020 Sep 10.
To investigate whether race (African American (AA) and white) is associated with sleep duration among adults from low socioeconomic (SES) strata and whether SES status, lifestyle behaviors, or health conditions are associated with sleep duration within race-sex groups.
This cross-sectional study includes 78,549 participants from the Southern Community Cohort Study (SCCS). Averaged daily sleep duration was assessed by weighted averages of self-reported sleep duration on weekdays and weekends. Adjusted odds ratios (ORs) of very short (<5 h/day), short (5-6 h/day), and long sleep (≥9 h/day) associated with pre-selected risk factors in each race-sex group were determined by multinomial logistic models.
The prevalence of very short and short sleep was similar among AAs (6.2% and 29.1%) and whites (6.5% and 29.1%). Long sleep was considerably more prevalent among AAs (19.3%) than whites (13.0%). Very short sleep was associated with lower education and family income, with stronger associations among whites. Higher physical activity levels significantly decreased odds for both very short (OR = 0.80) and long sleep (OR = 0.78). Smoking, alcohol use, and dietary intake were not associated with sleep duration. Regardless of race or sex, very short, short, and long sleep were significantly associated with self-reported health conditions, especially depression (ORs were 2.06, 1.33, and 1.38, respectively).
Sleep duration patterns differed between AAs and whites from the underrepresented SCCS population with low SES. Sleep duration was associated with several socioeconomic, health behaviors, and health conditions depending on race and sex.
调查低社会经济地位(SES)人群中,种族(非裔美国人(AA)和白人)是否与成年人的睡眠时间有关,以及种族-性别群体中 SES 状况、生活方式行为或健康状况是否与睡眠时间有关。
本横断面研究纳入了来自南方社区队列研究(SCCS)的 78549 名参与者。通过工作日和周末自我报告睡眠时间的加权平均值来评估平均每日睡眠时间。通过多变量逻辑模型确定每个种族-性别组中与预先选择的风险因素相关的非常短(<5 小时/天)、短(5-6 小时/天)和长(≥9 小时/天)睡眠时间的调整比值比(OR)。
AA(6.2%和 29.1%)和白人(6.5%和 29.1%)的非常短和短睡眠时间的患病率相似。AA 的长睡眠时间(19.3%)明显高于白人(13.0%)。非常短的睡眠与教育程度和家庭收入较低有关,而这种关联在白人中更为明显。较高的体力活动水平显著降低了非常短(OR=0.80)和长(OR=0.78)睡眠时间的几率。吸烟、饮酒和饮食摄入与睡眠时间无关。无论种族或性别如何,非常短、短和长睡眠时间与自我报告的健康状况显著相关,尤其是抑郁症(OR 分别为 2.06、1.33 和 1.38)。
来自代表性不足的低 SES SCCS 人群的 AA 和白人的睡眠时间模式存在差异。睡眠时间与多种社会经济、健康行为和健康状况有关,具体取决于种族和性别。