Gyasi Razak M, Hajek André, Owusu Richmond, James Peter Bai, Boampong Mary Sefa, Accam Burnett Tetteh, Abass Kabila, Owusu-Dabo Ellis, Phillips David R
Aging and Development Unit, African Population and Health Research Center (RMG), Nairobi, Kenya; National Centre for Naturopathic Medicine, Faculty of Health, Southern Cross University (RMG, PBJ), Lismore, NSW, Australia.
Department of Health Economics and Health Services Research, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg Center for Health Economics (AH), Hamburg, Germany.
Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2023 Nov;31(11):953-964. doi: 10.1016/j.jagp.2023.05.004. Epub 2023 May 13.
Sleep problems (SP) are highly prevalent and seriously affect health and well-being in old age. The aim of this study was to examine the association between SP and happiness in an urban-dwelling older sample. The authors further explore the effects of generalized anxiety and depressive symptoms in the SP-happiness link using serial mediating modeling.
Data came from the 2016 to 2018 Aging, Health, Psychological Well-being, and Health-seeking Behavior Study in Ghana (n = 661). The authors measured happiness with the cross-culturally validated item on a five-point scale. The GAD-7 and the CESD-8, respectively, assessed generalized anxiety and depressive symptoms. Participants reported nighttime and daytime SP in the last 30 days. The SPSS-based Hayes' PROCESS macro program (Model 6) was constructed to quantify the hypothesized mediation effect.
The analysis included 661 adults aged greater than or equal to 50 years (mean age = 65.53 [SD] = 11.89 years; 65.20% women). After full adjustment, path models showed that SP was negatively associated with happiness (β = -0.1277, 95%CI = -0.15950 to -0.096). Bootstrapping estimates revealed that the SP-happiness link was serially mediated via generalized anxiety representing 8.77%, depressive symptoms yielding 18.95%, and anxiety symptoms→depressive symptoms accounting for 26.70% of the total effect.
Generalized anxiety and depressive symptoms may explain the negative association between SP and happiness in urban-dwelling older adults in the sub-Saharan African (SSA) context. Interventions, social and clinical, to improve happiness through sleep quality should include ways to improve mental health. Longitudinal and cross-cultural data are warranted to assess the bi-directionality of this relationship.
睡眠问题(SP)在老年人中非常普遍,严重影响其健康和幸福感。本研究旨在调查城市老年样本中SP与幸福感之间的关联。作者还使用序列中介模型进一步探讨广泛性焦虑和抑郁症状在SP-幸福感联系中的作用。
数据来自2016年至2018年加纳的衰老、健康、心理健康和健康寻求行为研究(n = 661)。作者使用经过跨文化验证的五点量表项目来测量幸福感。分别用GAD-7和CESD-8评估广泛性焦虑和抑郁症状。参与者报告了过去30天的夜间和白天SP情况。构建基于SPSS的Hayes' PROCESS宏程序(模型6)来量化假设的中介效应。
分析纳入了661名年龄大于或等于50岁的成年人(平均年龄 = 65.53 [标准差] = 11.89岁;65.20%为女性)。经过全面调整后,路径模型显示SP与幸福感呈负相关(β = -0.1277,95%置信区间 = -0.15950至 -0.096)。自抽样估计显示,SP-幸福感联系通过广泛性焦虑(占总效应的8.77%)、抑郁症状(占18.95%)以及焦虑症状→抑郁症状(占26.70%)进行序列中介。
在撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)背景下,广泛性焦虑和抑郁症状可能解释了城市老年成年人中SP与幸福感之间的负相关关系。通过改善睡眠质量来提高幸福感的社会和临床干预措施应包括改善心理健康的方法。需要纵向和跨文化数据来评估这种关系的双向性。