Association of traumatic police event exposure with sleep quality and quantity in the BCOPS Study cohort.

Jonathan Bond, Tara A Hartley, Khachatur Sarkisian, Michael E Andrew, Luenda E Charles, John M Violanti, Cecil M Burchfiel
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Abstract

Police officers are exposed to traumatic and life-threatening events, which may lead to sleep problems. Prior studies of police officers have found them to have poor sleep quality and reduced sleep time. This study examined associations between traumatic events and sleep quality. Participants were 372 police officers from the Buffalo Cardio-metabolic Occupational Police Stress (BCOPS) Study. Police incidents were measured by the Police Incident Survey; sleep quality and quantity were derived from the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). Analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) was used to examine mean PSQI scores across categories of traumatic event frequency. Models were adjusted for age, education and ethnicity and stratified by sex and workload. In men, significant associations were found for the 'shooting of another officer' and sleep quality (p-value = 0.024) and sleep disturbances (p-value = 0.022). In women, seeing more 'abused children' was associated with poorer sleep quality (p-value = 0.050); increasing frequency of 'seeing victims of a serious traffic accident' was associated with shorter sleep duration (p-value = 0.032). Increased frequency of 'seeing dead bodies' was associated with poorer sleep quality (p-value = 0.040) and shorter sleep duration (p-value = 0.048). Among women with a high workload, a significant inverse association was found between 'seeing serious traffic accident victims' and global sleep quality (p-value = 0.031). In conclusion, a significant inverse association between frequency of select traumatic events and sleep quality was found in male and female police officers. The significant events differed by sex. Future research could examine longitudinal associations between career-long traumatic event exposures and sleep quality and how these associations differ by sex.

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BCOPS研究队列中创伤性警察事件暴露与睡眠质量和睡眠量的关系
警察面临着创伤和威胁生命的事件,这可能导致睡眠问题。先前对警察的研究发现,他们睡眠质量差,睡眠时间少。这项研究调查了创伤性事件和睡眠质量之间的关系。参与者是来自布法罗心脏代谢职业警察压力(BCOPS)研究的372名警察。警方事件是由警方事件统计调查统计;睡眠质量和数量来源于匹兹堡睡眠质量指数(PSQI)。采用协方差分析(ANCOVA)检查创伤事件频率各类别的PSQI平均得分。模型根据年龄、教育程度和种族进行了调整,并根据性别和工作量进行了分层。在男性中,“射杀另一名军官”与睡眠质量(p值= 0.024)和睡眠障碍(p值= 0.022)存在显著关联。在女性中,看到更多的“受虐儿童”与较差的睡眠质量有关(p值= 0.050);“看到严重交通事故受害者”的频率增加与睡眠时间缩短有关(p值= 0.032)。“看到尸体”的频率越高,睡眠质量越差(p值= 0.040),睡眠时间越短(p值= 0.048)。在工作量大的女性中,“看到严重的交通事故受害者”与整体睡眠质量之间存在显著的负相关(p值= 0.031)。总之,在男性和女性警察中,选择创伤事件的频率与睡眠质量之间存在显著的负相关。重大事件因性别而异。未来的研究可以检验职业生涯中创伤性事件暴露与睡眠质量之间的纵向联系,以及这些联系在性别上的差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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