Insomnia severity and daytime sleepiness in caregivers of advanced age

Lucy A. Webster, Talha Ali, Jody Sharninghausen, Alexandra M. Hajduk, Thomas Gill, Brienne Miner
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Abstract

Aging-related changes and caregiver burden may increase the risk for sleep disturbances among older caregivers, yet few studies have examined the prevalence of insomnia and daytime sleepiness in this group. We examined the relationship of caregiver status with insomnia and daytime sleepiness among persons of advanced age (>75 years of age).Cross-sectional.Community.Yale Precipitating Events Project participants (n=383, mean age 84.4 years, 67% female, 12% African American, 25% caregivers).Caregivers were persons who reported caring for another person in the past week or caring for/helping a friend or relative >4 times in the past month. We examined the correlates of caregiver status, including demographic (age, sex, race/ethnicity, education, marital status), psychosocial (living alone, Medicaid eligibility, depressive symptoms, social support, hours volunteered), and physical (obesity, chronic conditions, medication use, self-rated health status, physical activity, functional disability, cognitive impairment) factors. We used the Insomnia Severity Index (ISI) to establish insomnia severity (ISI score 0–28) or clinically significant insomnia symptoms (ISI ≥8). We used the Epworth Sleepiness Scale to establish daytime sleepiness (ESS score 0–24) or hypersomnia (ESS ≥10). In nonparametric multivariable regression analyses, we examined the relationship of caregiver status with insomnia or daytime sleepiness.Compared to non-caregivers, caregivers were younger, more educated, less likely to be Medicaid eligible and had lower rates of depression, obesity, poor self-rated health, low physical activity, functional disability, and cognitive impairment. Mean ISI and ESS scores were in the normal range and similar among non-caregivers and caregivers (ISI scores of 6.9±5.6 and 6.9±5.4, and ESS scores of 6.4±4.7 and 6.1±4.3, in non-caregivers and caregivers, respectively). Multivariable-adjusted models demonstrated no significant differences in ISI and ESS scores between non-caregivers and caregivers (regression coefficients for ISI and ESS scores of −0.01 [95% CI = −1.58, 1.21] and −0.10 [−1.05, 1.21], respectively).When compared to older non-caregivers, older caregivers had more advantageous demographic, psychosocial, and physical profiles and had similar levels of insomnia and daytime sleepiness on standardized questionnaires. Future research is needed to elucidate contextual factors (e.g., caregiving intensity and care partner disease) that may increase the risk of sleep disturbances among caregivers of advanced age.
高龄护理人员的失眠严重程度和白天嗜睡情况
与衰老相关的变化和照顾者的负担可能会增加老年照顾者出现睡眠障碍的风险,但很少有研究对这一群体中失眠和白天嗜睡的发生率进行调查。我们研究了高龄老人(年龄大于 75 岁)中照顾者身份与失眠和白天嗜睡的关系。耶鲁大学诱发事件项目参与者(人数=383,平均年龄 84.4 岁,67% 为女性,12% 为非裔美国人,25% 为照顾者)中的社区横断面照顾者是指在过去一周内照顾过他人或在过去一个月内照顾/帮助过亲友超过 4 次的人。我们研究了照顾者状况的相关因素,包括人口统计学因素(年龄、性别、种族/民族、教育程度、婚姻状况)、社会心理学因素(独居、医疗补助资格、抑郁症状、社会支持、志愿服务时间)和生理因素(肥胖、慢性病、药物使用、自评健康状况、体育活动、功能障碍、认知障碍)。我们使用失眠严重程度指数(ISI)来确定失眠严重程度(ISI 得分为 0-28 分)或有临床意义的失眠症状(ISI ≥8)。我们使用埃普沃思嗜睡量表(Epworth Sleepiness Scale)来确定白天嗜睡(ESS 得分为 0-24 分)或嗜睡症(ESS ≥10)。在非参数多变量回归分析中,我们研究了照顾者身份与失眠或白天嗜睡的关系。与非照顾者相比,照顾者更年轻、受教育程度更高、符合医疗补助资格的可能性更低,而且抑郁、肥胖、自我评价健康状况差、体力活动少、功能障碍和认知障碍的发生率更低。非护理者和护理者的 ISI 和 ESS 平均得分在正常范围内,且相似(非护理者和护理者的 ISI 得分分别为 6.9±5.6 和 6.9±5.4,ESS 得分分别为 6.4±4.7 和 6.1±4.3)。多变量调整模型显示,非护理者和护理者的 ISI 和 ESS 分数没有显著差异(ISI 和 ESS 分数的回归系数分别为 -0.01 [95% CI = -1.58, 1.21] 和 -0.10 [-1.05, 1.21])。未来的研究需要阐明可能增加高龄护理者睡眠障碍风险的背景因素(如护理强度和护理伙伴疾病)。
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