A longitudinal study on the change in sleep across three waves of the COVID-19 outbreaks in Hong Kong.

IF 1 4区 医学 Q4 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Sleep and Biological Rhythms Pub Date : 2023-09-08 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1007/s41105-023-00486-w
Denise Shuk Ting Cheung, Branda Yee-Man Yu, Simon Ching Lam, Doris Yin Ping Leung, Ka-Fai Chung, Fiona Yan-Yee Ho, Shu-Cheng Chen, Wing-Fai Yeung
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Abstract

In the year 2020, Hong Kong experienced four COVID-19 epidemic waves. The present study aimed to examine the transition of sleep disturbances and explore its associated factors across the later three epidemic waves. Among the 1138 respondents who participated in an online survey at the second wave (T1, April 2020), 338 and 378 participants also completed a follow-up at the third (T2, August 2020) and fourth waves (T3, December 2020), respectively. Participants completed the Insomnia Severity Index and an investigator-designed questionnaire regarding potential factors associated with sleep change such as perceived risk of being infected, economic stress, and confidence in the government and health care professional. Sample of this study were mainly female (67.7%), married (50.3%), young adults (54.2%) with tertiary education (81.6%). Maintaining normal sleep was the most prevalent trajectory of sleep of all three waves (50.5%), followed by persistent insomnia (17.2%) and remitted insomnia (9.0%). Besides female, older-age and lower education level, the results showed that increment in worry about family being infected (adjusted risk ratio, RR = 1.28), perceived interference of daily lives (adjusted RR = 1.19), and economic distress (adjusted RR = 1.24) were significantly associated with the development of clinical insomnia during the three epidemic waves. These factors were also associated with worsening of other sleep parameters. Insomnia being persistent across the three waves of COVID-19 outbreaks was common. Increasing economic distress, daily interference, and worry about family members being infected were associated with an increasing risk of clinical insomnia across the three COVID-19 outbreaks.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s41105-023-00486-w.

Abstract Image

关于香港三次 COVID-19 爆发期间睡眠变化的纵向研究。
2020年,香港经历了四次COVID-19疫潮。本研究旨在探讨睡眠障碍在后三次疫潮中的过渡情况及其相关因素。在第二波(T1,2020 年 4 月)参与网上调查的 1138 名受访者中,有 338 名和 378 名受访者分别在第三波(T2,2020 年 8 月)和第四波(T3,2020 年 12 月)完成了后续调查。参与者填写了失眠严重程度指数和一份由研究人员设计的调查问卷,内容涉及与睡眠改变相关的潜在因素,如受感染风险感知、经济压力、对政府和医护人员的信心等。本次研究的样本主要为女性(67.7%)、已婚(50.3%)、受过高等教育的年轻人(54.2%)(81.6%)。在所有三个波次中,维持正常睡眠是最普遍的睡眠轨迹(50.5%),其次是持续性失眠(17.2%)和缓解性失眠(9.0%)。结果显示,除了女性、高龄和低教育水平外,担心家人受感染(调整后风险比,RR = 1.28)、认为日常生活受到干扰(调整后风险比 = 1.19)和经济困扰(调整后风险比 = 1.24)的增加与三次疫情中临床失眠的发展显著相关。这些因素还与其他睡眠参数的恶化有关。在COVID-19爆发的三波疫情中,失眠持续存在是很常见的现象。在COVID-19爆发的三次疫情中,经济窘迫、日常干扰和对家庭成员受感染的担忧的增加与临床失眠风险的增加有关:在线版本包含补充材料,可在 10.1007/s41105-023-00486-w.上查阅。
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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来源期刊
Sleep and Biological Rhythms
Sleep and Biological Rhythms 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
9.10%
发文量
71
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Sleep and Biological Rhythms is a quarterly peer-reviewed publication dealing with medical treatments relating to sleep. The journal publishies original articles, short papers, commentaries and the occasional reviews. In scope the journal covers mechanisms of sleep and wakefullness from the ranging perspectives of basic science, medicine, dentistry, pharmacology, psychology, engineering, public health and related branches of the social sciences
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