Psychological resilience to trauma and longitudinal sleep outcomes among current and former nurses

IF 3.5 2区 医学 Q2 PSYCHIATRY
Laura Sampson , Arielle A.J. Scoglio , Kristen Nishimi , Karmel W. Choi , Ariel H. Kim , Yiwen Zhu , Qi Sun , Jae Hee Kang , Eric B. Rimm , Karestan C. Koenen , Laura D. Kubzansky
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective

A life-disrupting stressor (e.g. pandemic) may cause or exacerbate poor sleep health; resilience may offset impacts. We assessed relationships between pre-pandemic psychological resilience to trauma and sleep-related outcomes during the first year of the pandemic among current and former nurses.

Methods

Using data from 18,670 women in the Nurses' Health Study II, we characterized pre-pandemic resilience by cross-classifying experiences of higher versus lower lifetime trauma burden with unfavorable, adequate, and favorable psychological health (through January 2020). Sleep was measured before (2017) and during the pandemic, including: changes, quality, and duration. We modeled trajectories of sleep duration assessed at five time points (pre-pandemic in 2017, and then in four COVID-19-related surveys, 2020–2021) using latent class growth analysis.

Results

We observed four trajectories of sleep duration, all showing stable patterns, with averages ranging from 5.5 to 6 to 8.5–9 h of sleep per 24 h. Women with higher trauma/unfavorable psychological health had the highest risk for all poor sleep outcomes (e.g., RR for being in the shortest sleep trajectory versus healthy sleep duration: 2.53; 95 % CI: 2.21, 2.91). Relative to women categorized as most resilient, only women with lower trauma/favorable psychological health showed lower risk of getting less sleep after the pandemic started compared to no change (RR: 0.76; 95 % CI: 0.70, 0.83). This same pattern was observed for poor sleep quality.

Conclusion

Higher pre-pandemic resilience may have protected women against poor sleep outcomes during the pandemic. Findings could have long-term health implications, particularly if they generalize to other stressors.
现任和前任护士对创伤的心理弹性和纵向睡眠结果
目的:扰乱生活的压力源(如流行病)可能导致或加剧睡眠健康状况不佳;恢复力可能会抵消影响。我们评估了流行病前对创伤的心理恢复能力与现任和前任护士在流行病第一年的睡眠相关结果之间的关系。方法使用护士健康研究II中18,670名妇女的数据,我们通过交叉分类终身创伤负担较高与较低的经历,以及不利、适当和良好的心理健康(截至2020年1月)来表征大流行前的复原力。在大流行之前(2017年)和期间测量了睡眠,包括:变化、质量和持续时间。我们利用潜在类别增长分析,模拟了五个时间点(2017年大流行前,以及2020-2021年四次与covid -19相关的调查)评估的睡眠持续时间轨迹。结果:我们观察到四种睡眠持续时间轨迹,均表现出稳定的模式,平均每24小时睡眠时间从5.5到6到8.5-9小时不等。创伤程度较高/心理健康状况不佳的女性出现所有不良睡眠结果的风险最高(例如,最短睡眠轨迹与健康睡眠持续时间的RR: 2.53;95% ci: 2.21, 2.91)。与被归类为最具弹性的女性相比,只有创伤程度较低/心理健康状况良好的女性在大流行开始后睡眠不足的风险较低,而没有变化(RR: 0.76;95% ci: 0.70, 0.83)。睡眠质量差的人也有同样的规律。结论:大流行前较高的恢复力可能保护了妇女在大流行期间免受不良睡眠结果的影响。研究结果可能会对健康产生长期影响,特别是如果它们推广到其他压力源。
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来源期刊
Journal of Psychosomatic Research
Journal of Psychosomatic Research 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
6.40%
发文量
314
审稿时长
6.2 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Psychosomatic Research is a multidisciplinary research journal covering all aspects of the relationships between psychology and medicine. The scope is broad and ranges from basic human biological and psychological research to evaluations of treatment and services. Papers will normally be concerned with illness or patients rather than studies of healthy populations. Studies concerning special populations, such as the elderly and children and adolescents, are welcome. In addition to peer-reviewed original papers, the journal publishes editorials, reviews, and other papers related to the journal''s aims.
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