Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
Kintampo Health Research Centre, Ghana Health Service, Brong Ahafo Region, Kintampo, Ghana.
Sleep. 2022 Aug 11;45(8). doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsac033.
Several studies have examined sleep patterns in rural/indigenous communities, however little is known about sleep characteristics in women of reproductive age, and children within these populations. We investigate sleep-wake patterns in mothers and children (ages 3-5 years) leveraging data from the Ghana Randomized Air Pollution and Health Study (GRAPHS).
The GRAPHS cohort comprises of rural/agrarian communities in Ghana and collected multiday actigraphy in a subset of women and children to assess objective sleep-wake patterns. Data were scored using the Cole-Kripke and Sadeh algorithms for mothers/children. We report descriptive, baseline characteristics and objective sleep measures, compared by access to electricity/poverty status.
We analyzed data for 58 mothers (mean age 33 ± 6.6) and 64 children (mean age 4 ± 0.4). For mothers, mean bedtime was 9:40 pm ± 56 min, risetime 5:46 am ± 40 min, and total sleep time (TST) was 6.3 h ± 46 min. For children, median bedtime was 8:07 pm (interquartile range [IQR]: 7:50,8:43), risetime 6:09 am (IQR: 5:50,6:37), and mean 24-h TST 10.44 h ± 78 min. Children with access to electricity had a reduced TST compared to those without electricity (p = 0.02). Mean bedtime was later for both mothers (p = 0.05) and children (p = 0.08) classified as poor.
Mothers in our cohort demonstrated a shorter TST, and earlier bed/risetimes compared to adults in postindustrialized nations. In contrast, children had a higher TST compared to children in postindustrialized nations, also with earlier sleep-onset and offset times. Investigating objective sleep-wake patterns in rural/indigenous communities can highlight important differences in sleep health related to sex, race/ethnicity, and socioeconomic status, and help estimate the impact of industrialization on sleep in developed countries.
有几项研究调查了农村/土著社区的睡眠模式,但对于育龄妇女和这些人群中的儿童的睡眠特征知之甚少。我们利用加纳随机空气污染与健康研究(GRAPHS)的数据,研究了母亲和儿童(3-5 岁)的睡眠-觉醒模式。
GRAPHS 队列包括加纳的农村/农业社区,并在一部分妇女和儿童中收集了多天的活动记录仪数据,以评估客观的睡眠-觉醒模式。数据使用 Cole-Kripke 和 Sadeh 算法为母亲/儿童评分。我们报告了描述性的、基线特征和客观的睡眠测量值,并按电力供应/贫困状况进行了比较。
我们分析了 58 位母亲(平均年龄 33 ± 6.6 岁)和 64 位儿童(平均年龄 4 ± 0.4 岁)的数据。对于母亲,平均就寝时间为晚上 9:40 ± 56 分钟,起床时间为早上 5:46 ± 40 分钟,总睡眠时间(TST)为 6.3 小时 ± 46 分钟。对于儿童,中位数就寝时间为晚上 8:07(四分位距[IQR]:7:50,8:43),起床时间为早上 6:09(IQR:5:50,6:37),平均 24 小时 TST 为 10.44 小时 ± 78 分钟。有电力供应的儿童与没有电力供应的儿童相比,TST 减少(p = 0.02)。母亲(p = 0.05)和被归类为贫困的儿童(p = 0.08)的平均就寝时间都较晚。
与后工业化国家的成年人相比,我们队列中的母亲的 TST 更短,就寝和起床时间更早。相比之下,儿童的 TST 高于后工业化国家的儿童,入睡和起床时间也更早。调查农村/土著社区的客观睡眠-觉醒模式可以突出与性别、种族/民族和社会经济地位有关的睡眠健康的重要差异,并有助于估计工业化对发达国家睡眠的影响。