Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Pulmonology and Sleep Medicine, University at Buffalo Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, 955 Main Street, Buffalo, NY, 14203, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, University at Buffalo Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, 955 Main Street, Buffalo, NY, 14203, USA.
Sleep Breath. 2022 Sep;26(3):1351-1361. doi: 10.1007/s11325-021-02515-9. Epub 2021 Oct 18.
During the first few months of the COVID-19 outbreak, healthcare workers (HCW) faced levels of personal risk, emotional distress, and professional strain not seen in their lifetimes. This study described how these stressors influenced various aspects of their sleep patterns.
From May 19 to June 20, 2020, an electronic, cross-sectional survey was administered to a convenience sample of in- and outpatient HCW in a large, nonprofit healthcare system. Respondents described the pandemic's initial impact on personal and professional life and various sleep dimensions: regularity, efficiency, duration, timing, quality, and daytime sleepiness.
Two hundred seven providers responded, representing 17 different healthcare roles. Most (82%) were women with a median age of 39 years (IQR1-3, 31-53). A majority of respondents (81%) worked in an inpatient setting, with half (46%) primarily on the "frontline." Approximately one-third of respondents (37%) were physicians and one-quarter (28%) were nurses. Overall, 68% of HCW reported at least one aspect of sleep worsened during the beginning of the pandemic; the most impacted were daytime sleepiness (increased in 43%) and sleep efficiency (worse in 37%). After adjusting for COVID exposure and burnout, frontline providers had twofold higher odds of poor pandemic sleep, aOR 2.53, 95%CI 1.07-5.99. Among frontline providers, physicians were fivefold more likely to develop poor pandemic sleep compared to nurses (OR 5.73, 95%CI 1.15-28.57).
During the initial wave of COVID-19, a majority of HCW reported a decline in sleep with an increase in daytime sleepiness and insomnia. Frontline workers, specifically physicians, were at higher risk.
在 COVID-19 爆发的头几个月,医护人员(HCW)面临着他们一生中从未经历过的个人风险、情绪困扰和职业压力。本研究描述了这些压力源如何影响他们睡眠模式的各个方面。
2020 年 5 月 19 日至 6 月 20 日,对一家大型非营利性医疗保健系统中的门诊和住院 HCW 进行了一项横断面电子调查。受访者描述了大流行对个人和职业生活的最初影响,以及各种睡眠维度:规律性、效率、持续时间、时间、质量和白天嗜睡。
207 名医务人员做出了回应,代表了 17 种不同的医疗保健角色。大多数(82%)是女性,中位数年龄为 39 岁(IQR1-3,31-53)。大多数受访者(81%)在住院环境中工作,其中一半(46%)主要在“前线”工作。大约三分之一的受访者(37%)是医生,四分之一(28%)是护士。总体而言,68%的 HCW 报告在大流行开始时至少有一个方面的睡眠恶化;受影响最大的是白天嗜睡(增加了 43%)和睡眠效率(恶化了 37%)。在调整 COVID 暴露和倦怠后,一线医护人员发生不良大流行睡眠的几率增加了两倍,优势比(aOR)为 2.53,95%置信区间(95%CI)为 1.07-5.99。在一线医护人员中,与护士相比,医生发生不良大流行睡眠的几率增加了五倍(OR 5.73,95%CI 1.15-28.57)。
在 COVID-19 的初始阶段,大多数 HCW 的睡眠质量下降,白天嗜睡和失眠增加。一线工作人员,特别是医生,面临更高的风险。