Leidos, San Diego, CA 92106, USA.
Department of Health and Behavioral Sciences, Naval Health Research Center, San Diego, CA 92106, USA.
Mil Med. 2021 Jan 30;186(1-2):e160-e168. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usaa321.
Sleep disturbance is prevalent among service members; however, little is known about factors that compromise sleep in unique operational environments, such as naval ships. Given the importance of sleep to health and performance, it is critical to identify both causes and potential solutions to this serious issue. The objective of this qualitative study was to elucidate the barriers to sleep and the strategies service members use to improve their sleep and combat fatigue while living and working aboard ships (i.e., underway).
Interviews were conducted with 22 active duty service members assigned to sea duty. The semi-structured interview guide assessed the experiences of service members sleeping in shipboard environments. Interview transcripts were analyzed using applied thematic content analysis by two independent coders.
Participants were largely male (77.8%) and enlisted (88.9%). The most common barrier to obtaining sufficient sleep was stress, followed by rotating schedules, and environmental factors (e.g., noise and light). Additionally, many participants reported prioritizing other activities over sleep when off duty. Many participants did not report using any specific strategies to improve their sleep while underway. Among those who did, most described mitigating environmental barriers (e.g., noise-cancelling headphones or sleep masks). However, some participants also acknowledged these strategies are not always feasible, either attributable to cost or because sailors must be able to respond to alarms or commands. Notably, few sailors reported using stress mitigation or relaxation strategies to help sleep. Ingesting caffeine was the only strategy sailors reported using to alert themselves while fatigued.
Service members reported many unique barriers to sleep in the shipboard environment, yet many did not report the use of strategies to mitigate them. Further, few used alerting techniques when fatigued. This at-risk population could benefit from targeted educational interventions on sleep-promoting behaviors, prioritization of sleep, and fatigue mitigation.
睡眠障碍在军人中很常见;然而,对于在独特的作战环境中(例如军舰上)影响睡眠的因素知之甚少。鉴于睡眠对健康和表现的重要性,确定导致睡眠问题的原因以及解决该严重问题的潜在方法至关重要。本定性研究的目的是阐明睡眠障碍的原因以及军人在舰上生活和工作时(即在航时)改善睡眠和对抗疲劳的策略。
对 22 名被派往海上任务的现役军人进行了访谈。半结构化访谈指南评估了军人在舰上环境中睡眠的经历。两名独立编码员使用应用主题内容分析法对访谈记录进行了分析。
参与者主要为男性(77.8%)和 enlisted(88.9%)。获得充足睡眠的最大障碍是压力,其次是轮班和环境因素(例如噪音和光线)。此外,许多参与者在下班时报告说优先考虑其他活动而不是睡眠。许多参与者在航时没有报告使用任何特定的策略来改善睡眠。在那些确实使用策略的参与者中,大多数人描述了减轻环境障碍(例如降噪耳机或眼罩)。然而,一些参与者也承认这些策略并不总是可行,要么是因为成本,要么是因为水手必须能够响应警报或命令。值得注意的是,很少有水手报告使用减轻压力或放松的策略来帮助入睡。摄入咖啡因是水手报告在疲劳时使用的唯一提神策略。
军人报告了舰上环境中许多独特的睡眠障碍,但许多人没有报告使用策略来减轻这些障碍。此外,很少有人在疲劳时使用提神技巧。这个处于危险中的人群可能受益于有针对性的睡眠促进行为、睡眠优先排序和疲劳缓解的教育干预措施。