Taylor Kenneth A, Mysliwiec Vincent, Kimbrel Nathan A, Augustine Ann V, Ulmer Christi S
Duke University School of Medicine, Orthopaedic Surgery, Durham, NC, USA.
Duke University School of Medicine, Duke Clinical Research Institute, Durham, NC, USA.
Sleep Adv. 2023 Jan 12;4(1):zpad001. doi: 10.1093/sleepadvances/zpad001. eCollection 2023.
The purpose of this study was to (1) estimate trauma associated sleep disorder (TASD) prevalence among post-9/11 era veterans and to describe differences in service and comorbid mental health clinical characteristics among individuals with and without probable TASD, and (2) estimate TASD prevalence and characteristics of reported traumatic experiences stratified by sex.
We used cross-sectional data from the post-deployment mental health study of post-9/11 veterans, which enrolled and collected baseline data from 2005 to 2018. We classified veterans as having probable TASD using self-reported measures: traumatic experiences from the traumatic life events questionnaire (TLEQ) and items from the Pittsburgh sleep quality index with Addendum for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) mapped to TASD diagnostic criteria and ascertained mental health diagnoses (PTSD, major depressive disorder [MDD]) via Structured Clinical Interview for . We calculated effect sizes as prevalence ratios (PR) for categorical variables and Hedges' for continuous variables.
Our final sample included 3618 veterans (22.7% female). TASD prevalence was 12.1% (95% CI: 11.1% to 13.2%) and sex-stratified prevalence was similar for female and male veterans. Veterans with TASD had a much higher comorbid prevalence of PTSD (PR: 3.72, 95% CI: 3.41 to 4.06) and MDD (PR: 3.93, 95% CI: 3.48 to 4.43). Combat was the highest reported most distressing traumatic experience among veterans with TASD (62.6%). When stratifying by sex, female veterans with TASD had a wider variety of traumatic experiences.
Our results support the need for improved screening and evaluation for TASD in veterans, which is currently not performed in routine clinical practice.
本研究的目的是(1)估计9·11事件后时代退伍军人中创伤相关睡眠障碍(TASD)的患病率,并描述有和没有可能患TASD的个体在服役情况和共病心理健康临床特征方面的差异,以及(2)按性别分层估计TASD患病率和报告的创伤经历特征。
我们使用了9·11事件后退伍军人部署后心理健康研究的横断面数据,该研究于2005年至2018年招募并收集了基线数据。我们使用自我报告的测量方法将退伍军人分类为可能患有TASD:来自创伤性生活事件问卷(TLEQ)的创伤经历以及匹兹堡睡眠质量指数中与创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)增编相关的项目,并根据TASD诊断标准进行映射,并通过结构化临床访谈确定心理健康诊断(PTSD、重度抑郁症[MDD])。我们将效应量计算为分类变量的患病率比值(PR)和连续变量的赫奇斯效应量。
我们的最终样本包括3618名退伍军人(22.7%为女性)。TASD患病率为12.1%(95%CI:11.1%至13.2%),女性和男性退伍军人的性别分层患病率相似。患有TASD的退伍军人中PTSD(PR:3.72,95%CI:3.41至4.06)和MDD(PR:3.93,95%CI:3.48至4.43)的共病患病率要高得多。在患有TASD的退伍军人中,战斗是报告的最令人痛苦的创伤经历中比例最高的(62.6%)。按性别分层时,患有TASD的女性退伍军人有更多种类的创伤经历。
我们的结果支持需要改进对退伍军人TASD的筛查和评估,目前在常规临床实践中并未进行此项工作。