Testa Alexander, Jackson Dylan B, Semenza Daniel
Department of Criminology & Criminal Justice, University of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, USA.
Department of Population, Family, and Reproductive Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
J Sleep Res. 2021 Dec;30(6):e13353. doi: 10.1111/jsr.13353. Epub 2021 Apr 18.
The current study examines the associations between unfair police treatment and sleep quantity and quality among a nationally representative sample of adults from Wave V (years 2016-2018) of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (N = 12,057). Furthermore, considering the documented negative associations between unjust police treatment and both physical and psychological wellbeing, we investigate whether this relationship is attenuated by aspects of general health and depressive symptoms. Findings demonstrate that personal experience with unfair police treatment corresponds to worse sleep among adults, including sleeping fewer hours (especially 6 or fewer hours) and reporting more frequent trouble sleeping. This association was found to partially operate through depressive symptoms and general health. These findings suggest that strategies are needed among public health practitioners and law enforcement to mitigate the adverse health impacts of unfair police treatment.
本研究调查了全国青少年健康纵向研究第五波(2016 - 2018年)中具有全国代表性的成年样本(N = 12,057)中,警察不公平对待与睡眠数量和质量之间的关联。此外,鉴于已记录的警察不公正对待与身心健康之间的负面关联,我们研究了这种关系是否会因一般健康状况和抑郁症状而减弱。研究结果表明,成年人中个人经历警察不公平对待与较差的睡眠状况相对应,包括睡眠时间较短(尤其是6小时或更少)以及报告睡眠问题更频繁。这种关联被发现部分通过抑郁症状和一般健康状况起作用。这些发现表明,公共卫生从业者和执法部门需要采取策略来减轻警察不公平对待对健康的不利影响。