Curtis Ashley F, Jagannathan Sadhika, Musich Madison, Miller Mary Beth, McCrae Christina S
College of Nursing, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL 33612, USA.
Department of Behavioral Medicine and Psychiatry, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV 26506, USA.
Brain Sci. 2024 Mar 30;14(4):346. doi: 10.3390/brainsci14040346.
This study examined associations between COVID-19-related anxiety and sleep in middle-aged and older adults and tested whether these varied by age or sex. In June/July 2020, middle-aged/older adults aged 50+ ( = 277, 45% women, M = 64.68 ± 7.83) in the United States completed measures of sleep and COVID-19-related anxiety. Multiple regressions examined whether anxiety was independently associated with or interacted with age or sex in its associations with sleep health, controlling for age, education, medical conditions, sleep/pain medication use, and COVID-19 status. Greater COVID-19 anxiety was associated with worse sleep quality and daytime dysfunction. COVID-19-related anxiety interacted with age (not sex) in associations with total sleep time and sleep efficiency. Greater anxiety was associated with shorter total sleep time and lower sleep efficiency in oldest-older adults (73 years old) and youngest-older adults (65 years old) but not middle-aged adults (~57 years old). In mid to late life, older adults may be most vulnerable to the impact of COVID-19-related anxiety on sleep health. Social and behavioral (e.g., knowledge on age-related vulnerability to COVID-19 risk/morbidity/mortality, uncertainty, and changes to daily routines) and physiological factors (sleep disruption and age-related autonomic dysfunction) may underlie these associations. Interventions that mitigate negative pandemic-related psychological and sleep outcomes may be particularly relevant for older adults.
本研究调查了美国50岁及以上的中老年人中与新冠肺炎相关的焦虑与睡眠之间的关联,并检验了这些关联是否因年龄或性别而异。2020年6月/7月,美国50岁及以上的中老年人(n = 277,45%为女性,M = 64.68 ± 7.83)完成了睡眠和与新冠肺炎相关焦虑的测量。多元回归分析检验了焦虑在与睡眠健康的关联中是否与年龄或性别独立相关或相互作用,同时控制了年龄、教育程度、医疗状况、睡眠/疼痛药物使用情况以及新冠肺炎感染状况。更高的新冠肺炎焦虑与更差的睡眠质量和日间功能障碍相关。在与总睡眠时间和睡眠效率的关联中,与新冠肺炎相关的焦虑与年龄(而非性别)存在交互作用。在年龄最大的老年人(约73岁)和年龄最小的老年人(约65岁)中,更高的焦虑与更短的总睡眠时间和更低的睡眠效率相关,但在中年成年人(约57岁)中并非如此。在中年后期,老年人可能最容易受到与新冠肺炎相关焦虑对睡眠健康的影响。社会和行为因素(例如,对新冠肺炎风险/发病率/死亡率的年龄相关易感性、不确定性以及日常生活变化的了解)和生理因素(睡眠中断和年龄相关的自主神经功能障碍)可能是这些关联的基础。减轻与疫情相关的负面心理和睡眠结果的干预措施可能对老年人尤为重要。