Gupta Ravi, Grover Sandeep, Basu Aniruddha, Krishnan Vijay, Tripathi Adarsh, Subramanyam Alka, Nischal Anil, Hussain Arshad, Mehra Aseem, Ambekar Atul, Saha Gautam, Mishra Kshirod Kumar, Bathla Manish, Jagiwala Mukesh, Manjunatha Narayana, Nebhinani Naresh, Gaur Navendu, Kumar Niraj, Dalal Pronob Kumar, Kumar Pankaj, Midha Purav Kumar, Daga Ritu, Tikka Sai Krishna, Praharaj Samir Kumar, Goyal Sandeep Kumar, Kanchan Shweta, Sarkar Siddharth, Das Sourav, Sarkhel Sujit, Padhy Susanta Kumar, Sahoo Swapnajeet, Satyanarayana Rao T S, Dubey Vaibhav, Menon Vikas, Chhabra Vishal, Lahan Vivekanand, Avasthi Ajit
Department of Psychiatry, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Rishikesh, Uttarakhand, India.
Department of Psychiatry, Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, India.
Indian J Psychiatry. 2020 Jul-Aug;62(4):370-378. doi: 10.4103/psychiatry.IndianJPsychiatry_523_20. Epub 2020 Jul 27.
To mitigate the spread of the pandemic coronavirus infection (COVID-19), governments across the world have adopted "lockdowns" which have confined many individuals to their homes. This disrupts normal life routines, elements of which are important circadian cues. The pandemic is also associated with new stressors, altered roles, and uncertainties about health and economic security, which are also likely to affect sleep. The current study is an online survey of sleep experience, routines, physical activity, and symptoms of anxiety and depression, to study the alterations associated with the lockdown.
The survey was conducted in early May 2020 using a questionnaire circulated through social media platforms. Questions related to demographic characteristics, current and previous sleep schedules, routine, and working patterns. Insomnia (Insomnia Severity Index - 4), Stress (Perceived Stress Scale - 4), anxiety and depressive symptoms (Patient Health Questionnaire - 4) and physical activity (International Physical Activities Questionnaire) were assessed using standardized instruments.
A total of 958 valid responses were received. Compared to the prelockdown period, there was a shift to a later bedtime and waking time, with a reduction in night-time sleep and an increase in day-time napping. These effects were visible across occupational groups, but mostly affected working individuals except health professionals. Sleep quality deteriorated across groups. Reductions in sleep duration were associated with depressive symptoms.
The COVID-19 lockdown is associated with changes in sleep schedule and in the quantity and quality of night-time sleep. Although these changes are associated with elevated rates of emotional symptoms, it is unclear from these cross-sectional results, whether sleep deterioration produces psychological distress, or vice versa.
为减缓新冠病毒感染(COVID-19)的传播,世界各国政府都采取了“封锁”措施,许多人因此被限制在家中。这打乱了正常的生活作息,而其中一些因素是重要的昼夜节律线索。疫情还带来了新的压力源、角色转变以及健康和经济安全方面的不确定性,这些也可能影响睡眠。本研究是一项关于睡眠体验、作息、身体活动以及焦虑和抑郁症状的在线调查,旨在研究与封锁相关的变化。
该调查于2020年5月初通过社交媒体平台发放问卷进行。问题涉及人口统计学特征、当前和以前的睡眠时间表、日常作息及工作模式。使用标准化工具评估失眠(失眠严重程度指数 - 4)、压力(感知压力量表 - 4)、焦虑和抑郁症状(患者健康问卷 - 4)以及身体活动(国际身体活动问卷)。
共收到958份有效回复。与封锁前相比,就寝时间和起床时间推迟,夜间睡眠时间减少,白天小睡时间增加。这些影响在各个职业群体中都可见,但除了医护人员外,主要影响在职人员。各群体的睡眠质量均下降。睡眠时间的减少与抑郁症状有关。
COVID-19封锁与睡眠时间表以及夜间睡眠的数量和质量变化有关。尽管这些变化与情绪症状发生率升高有关,但从这些横断面结果尚不清楚是睡眠恶化导致心理困扰,还是反之亦然。