Tubbs Andrew S, Ghani Sadia B, Valencia Dora, Jean-Louis Girardin, Killgore William D S, Fernandez Fabian-Xosé, Grandner Michael A
Department of Psychiatry, University of Arizona College of Medicine, Tucson 1501 N. Campbell Ave., Suite AHSC 7326, Tucson, AZ 85724-5002, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL 33136, USA.
Sleep Epidemiol. 2022 Dec;2. doi: 10.1016/j.sleepe.2022.100022. Epub 2022 Jan 19.
Habitual insufficient sleep may contribute to cardiometabolic disease in the United States, particularly among racial and ethnic minorities. However, there is mixed evidence on secular trends in U.S. sleep duration.
Cross-sectional data from 413,417 individuals were acquired from the National Health Interview Survey from 2005-2018. Variables included self-reported sleep duration as well as lifetime diagnosis of hypertension, coronary heart disease, diabetes, and pre-diabetes, and obesity. Population-weighted robust Poisson models estimated annual trends in sleep duration and the prevalence risk ratios (PRR) of cardiometabolic disease as a function of sleep duration.
Population-based survey.
Daily sleep duration decreased -0.62 min ([-0.71, 0.54], < 0.01) annually from 2005-2018. However, this decline began only after 2010, when sleep duration fell by 1.04 min ([-1.21, -0.86], < 0.01) each year. This trend varied by race (two-way ANOVA, = 0.02), such that Mexican Hispanic individuals saw a greater decline (-1.83 [-2.37, -1.30] min per year, < 0.01) than whites (-0.83 [-1.02, -0.64] min per year, < 0.01). Additionally, a 1-h loss in daily sleep duration was linked to 4% greater prevalence of hypertension (PRR: 1.04, [1.04, 1.05]), 3% greater prevalence of diabetes (PRR: 1.03 [1.01, 1.05]), and 8% greater prevalence of obesity (PRR: 1.08 [1.07, 1.09]) after adjusting for age, sex, employment, marital status, and survey year.
There is a secular decline in U.S. daily sleep duration that is greater among Mexican Hispanic individuals. Moreover, reduced sleep duration is associated with more prevalent cardiometabolic disease.
在美国,习惯性睡眠不足可能会导致心脏代谢疾病,尤其是在少数族裔中。然而,关于美国睡眠时间的长期趋势,证据并不一致。
从2005年至2018年的国家健康访谈调查中获取了413,417人的横断面数据。变量包括自我报告的睡眠时间以及高血压、冠心病、糖尿病、糖尿病前期和肥胖症的终生诊断情况。人口加权稳健泊松模型估计了睡眠时间的年度趋势以及作为睡眠时间函数的心脏代谢疾病的患病率风险比(PRR)。
基于人群的调查。
2005年至2018年期间,每日睡眠时间每年减少-0.62分钟([-0.71, -0.54],P<0.01)。然而,这种下降仅在2010年之后开始,当时睡眠时间每年下降1.04分钟([-1.21, -0.86],P<0.01)。这种趋势因种族而异(双向方差分析,P = 0.02),墨西哥裔西班牙人睡眠时间的下降幅度(每年-1.83 [-2.37, -1.30]分钟,P<0.01)大于白人(每年-0.83 [-1.02, -0.64]分钟,P<0.01)。此外,在调整年龄、性别、就业、婚姻状况和调查年份后,每日睡眠时间减少1小时与高血压患病率增加4%(PRR:1.04,[1.04, 1.05])、糖尿病患病率增加3%(PRR:1.03 [1.01, 1.05])和肥胖症患病率增加8%(PRR:1.08 [1.07, 1.09])相关。
美国的每日睡眠时间呈长期下降趋势,墨西哥裔西班牙人的下降幅度更大。此外,睡眠时间缩短与更普遍的心脏代谢疾病有关。