Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, Sleep Disorders Center, University of Maryland School of Medicine, 100 N Greene St, 2nd Floor, Baltimore, MD, 21201, USA.
Department of Epidemiology & Biostatistics, School of Public Health, SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University, New York, NY, USA.
Pharmacoeconomics. 2023 Jul;41(7):771-785. doi: 10.1007/s40273-023-01249-8. Epub 2023 Mar 18.
Insufficient and disturbed sleep are associated with significant morbidity among working-age adults. Poor sleep results in negative health outcomes and increases economic costs to employers. The current systematic review surveyed the peer-reviewed scientific literature and aggregated scientific evidence of sleep-related economic burdens borne by employers.
A systematic review was performed to identify peer-reviewed, English language studies evaluating the economic impact of insufficient and disturbed sleep among adult employee populations. An exhaustive literature search was performed using keywords related to sleep, economics, and the workplace. Included were scientific studies (randomized controlled trials, cohort and case control studies, cross-sectional and longitudinal studies) examining specific employee populations with relevant sleep and economic outcomes. Each included study was evaluated for risk of bias and relevant data was extracted and summarized.
Sleep problems among employee populations are associated with worsened workplace outcomes, such as presenteeism, absenteeism, and accidents. Sleep problems also increased costs to employers, ranging from US$322 to US$1967 per employee. Interventions to improve sleep, such as the use of blue-light filtering glasses, strategic shift scheduling, and targeted interventions to treat insomnia, may improve workplace outcomes and reduce costs.
This review synthesizes the existing data regarding the negative impacts of insufficient and disturbed sleep on the workplace, suggesting that employers have an economic stake in their employees' sleep.
PROSPERO: CRD42021224212.
睡眠不足和睡眠质量差与工作年龄段成年人的高发病率密切相关。睡眠质量差会导致健康状况恶化,并增加雇主的经济成本。本系统评价调查了同行评议的科学文献,并汇总了雇主承担的与睡眠相关的经济负担的科学证据。
进行了系统评价,以确定评估成年员工人群睡眠不足和睡眠质量差对经济影响的同行评议、英文文献。使用与睡眠、经济学和工作场所相关的关键字,进行了全面的文献检索。包括评估特定员工人群睡眠和经济结果的科学研究(随机对照试验、队列和病例对照研究、横断面和纵向研究)。对每一项纳入的研究进行偏倚风险评估,并提取和总结相关数据。
员工人群中的睡眠问题与工作场所的不良结果有关,如出勤、缺勤和事故。睡眠问题也增加了雇主的成本,每个员工的成本从 322 美元到 1967 美元不等。改善睡眠的干预措施,如使用蓝光过滤眼镜、战略性的班次安排,以及针对失眠的针对性干预措施,可能会改善工作场所的结果并降低成本。
本综述综合了现有关于睡眠不足和睡眠质量差对工作场所的负面影响的数据,表明雇主在员工的睡眠方面存在经济利益。
PROSPERO:CRD42021224212。