Matsumoto Yuuki, Uchimura Naohisa, Ishitake Tatsuya
Division of Public Health, Department of Social Medicine, Nihon University School of Medicine, 30-1 Oyaguchi, Kami-cho, Itabashi-ku, Tokyo 173-8610 Japan.
Department of Neuropsychiatry, Kurume University School of Medicine, 67 Asahi-machi, Kurume, Fukuoka 830-0011 Japan.
Sleep Biol Rhythms. 2021 Nov 27;20(2):211-217. doi: 10.1007/s41105-021-00357-2. eCollection 2022 Apr.
Unmarried people often have disorderly lifestyles, and sleep problems (e.g., insomnia, short sleep duration, social jetlag) are becoming more complex due to the modern 24-h society. To improve health promotion measures for unmarried people, this study examined the relationship between marital status and sleep assessed as a multifactorial structure (phase, quality, quantity) in Japanese day workers. A cross-sectional survey was conducted with employees at five workplaces in Japan. Participants indicated their marital status, and the 3-Dimensional Sleep Scale measured sleep condition. We used scale cutoff values to define poor sleep phase, quality, and quantity (scores below the cutoff). "All poor sleep" and "all good sleep" were defined as when all scores were below or above the cutoff, respectively. Data from 786 participants (578 men, 208 women) were analyzed. Multivariate analysis showed that being unmarried was significantly related to poor sleep phase, quality, and quantity, with increased odds ratios. In unmarried participants, odds ratios (OR) were highest for poor sleep quantity in men (OR: 2.15) and poor sleep phase in women (OR: 2.73). All poor sleep showed the highest odds ratio for both unmarried men (OR: 2.74) and women (OR: 6.13), while unmarried men showed significantly decreased odds ratios for all good sleep (OR: 0.51). The finding that being unmarried was more closely associated with poor sleep quality and quantity in men, and more closely associated with poor sleep phase in women, could greatly contribute to creating measures to promote improved sleep in unmarried people.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s41105-021-00357-2.
未婚者往往生活方式无序,并且由于现代的24小时社会,睡眠问题(如失眠、睡眠时间短、社会时差)正变得愈发复杂。为改善针对未婚者的健康促进措施,本研究调查了日本日班工人的婚姻状况与作为多因素结构(阶段、质量、数量)评估的睡眠之间的关系。在日本五个工作场所对员工进行了横断面调查。参与者表明他们的婚姻状况,并用三维睡眠量表测量睡眠状况。我们使用量表临界值来定义睡眠阶段差、质量差和数量少(分数低于临界值)。“所有睡眠差”和“所有睡眠好”分别定义为所有分数均低于或高于临界值的情况。对786名参与者(578名男性,208名女性)的数据进行了分析。多变量分析表明,未婚与睡眠阶段差、质量差和数量少显著相关,优势比增加。在未婚参与者中,男性睡眠数量少的优势比(OR)最高(OR:2.15),女性睡眠阶段差的优势比最高(OR:2.73)。“所有睡眠差”在未婚男性(OR:2.74)和女性(OR:6.13)中均显示出最高的优势比,而未婚男性“所有睡眠好”的优势比显著降低(OR:0.51)。未婚男性睡眠质量和数量差的关联更紧密,未婚女性睡眠阶段差的关联更紧密,这一发现可能极大地有助于制定促进未婚者改善睡眠的措施。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s41105-021-00357-2获取的补充材料。