Gorovoy Suzanne, Phan Sydney, Begay Tommy K, Valencia Dora, Hale Lauren, Robbins Rebecca, Killgore William D S, Williamson Ariel A, Grandner Michael
Sleep and Health Research Program, Department of Psychiatry, University of Arizona College of Medicine, Tucson, AZ, United States.
Department of Family, Population and Preventative Medicine, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY, United States.
Front Public Health. 2024 Feb 5;11:1307630. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.1307630. eCollection 2023.
Regional sleep differences may reflect other important indicators of health and well-being. Examining sleep health at the regional level can help inform policies to improve population health. We examined the relationship between neighborhood-level adult sleep health (modeled in this study via adult sleep duration) and other health metrics and multiple indicators of child-relevant opportunity.
Data were obtained from the "500 Cities" data collected by the CDC, including the proportion of the adult population in each tract that report obtaining at least 7 h of sleep. The Child Opportunity Index (COI) provides indices for "education," "health and environment," and "social and economic" domains, as well as a global score. When data were merged, 27,130 census tracts were included. Linear regression analyses examined COI associated with the proportion of the adult population obtaining 7 h of sleep.
Adult sleep duration was associated with global COI, such that for each additional percent of the population that obtains ≥ 7 h of sleep, COI increases by 3.6 points (95%CI[3.57, 3.64]). Each component of COI was separately related to adult sleep duration. All associations were attenuated but significant in adjusted analyses. In stepwise analyses, sleep health via adult sleep duration emerged as the strongest correlate of global COI, accounting for 57.2% of the variance ( < 0.0001). Similarly, when stepwise analyses examined each component of COI as dependent variable, sleep health consistently emerged as the most substantial correlate (all < 0.0001).
Community levels of sufficient sleep are associated with greater childhood opportunities, which itself is robustly associated with a wide range of health and economic outcomes. Future work can examine whether this association can develop into scalable interventions.
区域睡眠差异可能反映健康和幸福的其他重要指标。在区域层面检查睡眠健康有助于为改善人群健康的政策提供信息。我们研究了邻里层面的成人睡眠健康(本研究通过成人睡眠时间建模)与其他健康指标以及与儿童相关机会的多个指标之间的关系。
数据来自美国疾病控制与预防中心收集的“500个城市”数据,包括每个普查区中报告至少睡7小时的成年人口比例。儿童机会指数(COI)提供了“教育”、“健康与环境”以及“社会与经济”领域的指数以及一个综合得分。合并数据时,纳入了27,130个普查区。线性回归分析研究了与获得7小时睡眠的成年人口比例相关的COI。
成人睡眠时间与综合COI相关,即获得≥7小时睡眠的人口每增加1%,COI增加3.6分(95%置信区间[3.57, 3.64])。COI的每个组成部分都分别与成人睡眠时间相关。在调整分析中,所有关联均减弱但仍显著。在逐步分析中,通过成人睡眠时间衡量的睡眠健康成为综合COI的最强相关因素,占方差的57.2%(P<0.0001)。同样,当逐步分析将COI的每个组成部分作为因变量时,睡眠健康始终是最主要的相关因素(所有P<0.0001)。
社区充足睡眠水平与更多的儿童机会相关,而儿童机会本身又与广泛的健康和经济成果密切相关。未来的工作可以研究这种关联是否能够发展为可扩展的干预措施。