Mariacarolina Vacca, Andrea Zagaria, Valeria Fiori, Caterina Lombardo, Andrea Ballesio
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objectives: This study aims to evaluate the association between ecological assessment experience of loneliness and nocturnal sleep in a sample of healthy adolescents and to investigate the potential mediating role of pre-sleep worry in this relationship.
Methods: Each evening, participants completed an electronic diary including items assessing loneliness and worry. The time of diary administration was set on an individual basis to capture the actual pre-bed experience. Sleep parameters were assessed using actigraphy.
Results: Analyses were conducted on 72 participants (53.9% boys; Mage = 15.65; SD = 1.32) and 535 nights. Multilevel structural equation modeling indicated that within person loneliness fluctuations over the assessment period predicted shorter sleep duration through the mediation of high pre-sleep worry (B = -1.634, p = .027); More specifically, at the within level, loneliness was significantly and positively related to worry (B = .131, p = .001), which in turn was negatively related to sleep duration (B = -12.502, p = .028).One step increase in loneliness-associated pre-sleep worry predicted a decrease of 12 minutes in sleep duration. The mediation path was not influenced by anxiety and gender differences in the adjusted analysis. Results on other sleep parameters were not significant.
Conclusions: Findings suggest that adolescents' loneliness experienced at bedtime may influence sleep duration through worry. Sleep-promoting interventions in adolescents may benefit from targeting loneliness and pre-sleep cognitions.
期刊介绍:
Behavioral Sleep Medicine addresses behavioral dimensions of normal and abnormal sleep mechanisms and the prevention, assessment, and treatment of sleep disorders and associated behavioral and emotional problems. Standards for interventions acceptable to this journal are guided by established principles of behavior change. Intending to serve as the intellectual home for the application of behavioral/cognitive science to the study of normal and disordered sleep, the journal paints a broad stroke across the behavioral sleep medicine landscape. Its content includes scholarly investigation of such areas as normal sleep experience, insomnia, the relation of daytime functioning to sleep, parasomnias, circadian rhythm disorders, treatment adherence, pediatrics, and geriatrics. Multidisciplinary approaches are particularly welcome. The journal’ domain encompasses human basic, applied, and clinical outcome research. Behavioral Sleep Medicine also embraces methodological diversity, spanning innovative case studies, quasi-experimentation, randomized trials, epidemiology, and critical reviews.