Center for Health Sciences, SRI International, Menlo Park, California, USA.
Advanced Fellowship Program in Mental Illness Research and Treatment, Mid-Atlantic Mental Illness Research Education and Clinical Center (MIRECC), Central Virginia VA Health Care System, Richmond, Virginia, USA; Department of Psychology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia, USA.
Sleep Health. 2021 Apr;7(2):134-142. doi: 10.1016/j.sleh.2020.12.008. Epub 2021 Jan 26.
COVID-19 escalated into a global pandemic affecting countries around the world. As communities shut down to reduce disease spread, all aspects of life have been altered, including sleep. This study investigated changes in sleep patterns and correlates of sleep health in a global sample and examined relationships between sleep health and psychological distress.
Cross-sectional.
Online survey distributed between April 19 and May 3, 2020.
Total 6882 participants (18-94 years) across 59 countries.
Sleep health (RU-SATED), demographics, pandemic-related factors, mood.
More than half the sample shifted their sleep toward later bed- and wake-times, and more than a third reported increased sleep disturbances during the pandemic. Older age, being partnered, and living in a higher income country were associated with better sleep health, while a stricter level of quarantine and pandemic-related factors (being laid off from job, financial strain, or difficulties transitioning to working from home) were associated with poorer sleep health. Domestic conflict was the strongest correlate of poorer sleep health. Poorer sleep health was strongly associated with greater depression and anxiety symptoms. Participants from Latin America reported the lowest sleep health scores.
COVID-19-associated factors have impacted sleep health on a global level. While our data are correlational, sleep health is strongly linked with mental health and could play a protective role against developing mental distress during pandemic-related isolation. Sleep health should be incorporated into public health messages aimed at helping people cope with the effects of a pandemic to maintain optimal mental and physical health.
COVID-19 大流行已蔓延至世界各地,成为全球性大流行病。为减少疾病传播,各地社区纷纷关闭,人们的生活也发生了多方面的改变,包括睡眠。本研究旨在调查全球范围内睡眠模式的变化及睡眠健康的相关因素,并探讨睡眠健康与心理困扰之间的关系。
横断面研究。
2020 年 4 月 19 日至 5 月 3 日在线调查。
来自 59 个国家的 6882 名参与者(18-94 岁)。
睡眠健康(RU-SATED)、人口统计学资料、大流行相关因素、情绪。
超过一半的样本改变了他们的睡眠习惯,上床和起床时间变晚,超过三分之一的人报告在大流行期间睡眠干扰增加。年龄较大、有伴侣、居住在高收入国家与更好的睡眠健康相关,而更严格的隔离级别和大流行相关因素(失业、经济压力或难以在家工作过渡)与更差的睡眠健康相关。家庭冲突是与较差睡眠健康最相关的因素。较差的睡眠健康与更大的抑郁和焦虑症状密切相关。来自拉丁美洲的参与者报告的睡眠健康评分最低。
与 COVID-19 相关的因素对全球的睡眠健康产生了影响。虽然我们的数据是相关的,但睡眠健康与心理健康密切相关,在与隔离相关的大流行期间,它可能对预防心理健康问题起到保护作用。睡眠健康应纳入旨在帮助人们应对大流行影响以保持最佳身心健康的公共卫生信息中。