Department of Psychological Science, University of California Irvine.
Behav Med. 2024 Jan-Mar;50(1):1-15. doi: 10.1080/08964289.2022.2085651. Epub 2022 Jun 28.
Before the COVID-19 pandemic, undergraduate students experienced sleep problems and mental health issues that were negatively associated with academic achievement. Studies comparing undergraduate sleep and health pre- to mid-pandemic have yielded mixed results, necessitating additional research on other cohorts and examination of potential moderators. The present study was conducted to examine whether American undergraduate students tested mid-pandemic experienced poorer sleep, health, and academic achievement relative to students tested pre-pandemic, as well as to examine whether poor sleep during the pandemic was preferentially associated with poorer health in women. The current cross-sectional study included 217 participants tested pre-pandemic (February-December 2019) and a separate sample of 313 participants tested mid-pandemic (November-December 2020). Participants in both samples provided demographic information and completed questionnaires inquiring about participant sleep quality, insomnia, and cumulative grade point average (GPA); participants in the mid-pandemic sample also reported on measures of general, physical, and mental health. Participants tested mid-pandemic reported poorer global sleep quality, greater insomnia severity, greater stress, and higher cumulative GPAs relative to participants tested pre-pandemic. For the mid-pandemic sample only, poorer sleep quality was associated with reduced physical health; interactions indicated that women with poor sleep quality reported poorer mental health relative to both women with good sleep quality and men with poor quality sleep. Perceived stress mediated the association between sleep problems and GPA. These findings indicate that the pandemic negatively impacted the functioning of undergraduate students and highlights the need for future studies examining additional moderators of the reported effects.
在 COVID-19 大流行之前,本科生就经历过睡眠问题和心理健康问题,这些问题与学业成绩呈负相关。比较大流行前至大流行中期本科生睡眠和健康状况的研究结果喜忧参半,因此需要对其他队列进行更多研究,并检查潜在的调节因素。本研究旨在检验美国本科生在大流行中期的睡眠、健康和学业成绩是否比大流行前测试的学生更差,以及检验大流行期间睡眠质量差是否与女性健康状况更差有关。本横断面研究包括 217 名在大流行前(2019 年 2 月至 12 月)接受测试的参与者和 313 名在大流行中期(2020 年 11 月至 12 月)接受测试的独立样本参与者。两个样本的参与者均提供了人口统计学信息,并完成了关于参与者睡眠质量、失眠和累积平均绩点(GPA)的问卷调查;大流行中期样本的参与者还报告了一般、身体和心理健康的测量结果。与大流行前测试的参与者相比,大流行中期测试的参与者报告全球睡眠质量更差、失眠严重程度更高、压力更大、累积 GPA 更高。仅对于大流行中期样本,睡眠质量较差与身体健康状况下降有关;交互作用表明,睡眠质量差的女性与睡眠质量好的女性和睡眠质量差的男性相比,心理健康状况更差。感知压力中介了睡眠问题与 GPA 之间的关系。这些发现表明,大流行对本科生的功能产生了负面影响,并强调了未来研究需要检查报告影响的其他调节因素。